On May 10, 1941, Deputy Fuhrer of the German Reich, Rudolf Hess piloted a BF-110 for a clandestine flight to England with the apparent intention of negotiating a separate peace treaty with England. Hess parachuted from his Messerschmitt Bf-110 and landed in the English countryside while the airplane flew on to crash in Scotland. Fragments of the airplane were recovered, and markings were determined after a close inspection of photographs of the crash site. Rudolf Hess never had a chance to negotiate since any knowledge of the flight was denied byAdolf Hitler and Deputy Fuhrer Hess was condemned by the German government as having gone mad. Hess served the duration of WWII in an English POW camp and after the war stood trial at the Nuremberg War Crimes trials. Having been convicted of war crimes, Hess spent the rest of his life in Spandau Prison.
One decal sheet with markings for 3 versions:
- Bf 110, German Luftwaffe, Rudolf Hess’s aircraft, May 1941
- Bf 110, German Luftwaffe, E-2, 6./NJG 1 May 1942
- Bf 110, German Luftwaffe, I/ZG 26, Battle of Britain, Summer-Fall 1940