Kind of interesting ...
The Origins of the Battleship’s Kingfisher
"It was August 20, 1942 and a dense fog shrouded uninhabited Calvert Island, Canada. A formation of new OS2U-3 Kingfishers passed overhead enroute to the Aleutian Islands. In the fog, the formation became separated and one Kingfisher slammed into the side of Mt. Buxton. This plane was flown by pilot Ensign Mac J. Roebuck and gunner AMM1/c Stanley Goddard. Incredibly, Roebuck and Goddard were unhurt and walked down the mountain to the coast where they were rescued. The plane was left to the elements after a brief salvage operation.
In 1963, the Canadian authorities recovered the plane and shipped it to the Air Museum in Calgary. The wreckage was then turned over to the NORTH CAROLINA for restoration. The Battleship requested that Vought Aeronautics restore the plane. In 1970, it was shipped to Dallas, Texas, where the Quarter-Century Club (made up of retired Vought workers) began the restoration. After a year of work, the OS2U-3 Kingfisher was placed aboard the Battleship and dedicated on June 25, 1971." Kim Sincox, Museum Services Director, Battleship NC
USS North Carolina (BB-55)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USS_North_Carolina_(BB-55)



Mac Roebuck, a U.S. Navy pilot, stands next to an OS2U Kingfisher in which he made a crash landing on Mt. Buxton, Calvert Island, British Columbia, Canada. 1942

RCAF helicopter picking up wrecked USN OS2U Kingfisher from Mt. Buxton, British Columbia 22 years after the crashing. 1964

Mac J. Roebuck, the pilot of the OS2U Kingfisher that crashed on Mt. Buxton, British Columbia, Canada, in 1942, visits Vought Aeronautics plant in 1970 to see his old plane before its restoration.

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Pilot of the OS2U Kingfisher that crashed on Mt. Buxton, British Columbia in 1942, visits Vought Aeronautics plant in 1971 to see his old plane after rebuilt.

OS2U Kingfisher exhibited on deck

OS2U Kingfisher exhibited on deck

Aerial view of the USS North Carolina Battleship Memorial, 2006
Photo sources: NMNA archives, Wiki, SDASM archives