I did some digging on the Art Wolk Panther and found it mentioned in several places. Some info:
https://johnstonsunrise.net/stories/ted ... -pilot,366There is a photo from an airshow at Quonset Point in 2017 in this write-up:
https://photorecon.net/quonset-point-ri ... -lot-more/Another recent mention that likely refers to this Panther:
https://www.providencejournal.com/news/ ... -wednesdayA summary for those who don't feel like clicking on a bunch of links:
After the aircraft crashed in Kalamazoo, it was sold at auction by the Air Zoo in 2005 - this was the last I had seen or heard of the aircraft. At that point, it looked as it appeared in photo from 2007 in this thread.
It was bought by the USS Saratoga Museum Foundation, but plans for that museum never came to fruition. After that, it was then part of the Rhode Island Aviation Hall of Fame/USS John F. Kennedy project. The JFK project obviously never came to fruition since it was scrapped. The above article says the Panther was destined for the New England branch of a Ted Williams Museum. The only other mention I can find online of this effort is here:
https://www.milb.com/news/gcs-12248028Google Earth doesn't show anything resembling a Panther in the area of the stadium.
The Rhode Island Aviation Hall of Fame is trying to establish a permanent museum at Quonset Point:
https://riahof.org/news/quonset-land-ba ... o-covid-19I'm assuming the aircraft is probably in storage at or around Quonset Point and still under the care of the Rhode Island Aviation Hall of Fame, but who knows? At any rate, it doesn't appear likely to fly.
Back to your regularly scheduled programming on the Panthers for sale. Let's hope they can find a good home.