Goddard appears to have departed Bennett on June 2, 1898, reaching Tagish Lake the next day just to return and wait for the river to get free of ice.
[7] Albert Goddard's wife Clara accompanied him on the voyage, and was later honoured as the first female riverboat pilot on the Upper Yukon River.
[10] Three of the crew, Charles MacDonald, Fay Ransom and John Thompson, drowned while two were rescued by a local trapper in a rowboat.
[10] The only thing that marked the existence of her wreck was the name of the shoreline prominence, Goddard Point, which in 1936 became an official map feature.
[12] A Parks Canada team searched offshore of Goddard Point using divers on a towed dive board, but did not detect any sign of the wreck.
[15] Similarly, in 1997 with improved technology an area near Goddard Point was scanned and a submerged feature was identified but the exact location could not be determined.
[15] Finally, in June 2008, a conventional fish finder picked up a target of interest in 15 metres of water, not far from Goddard Point.
[19] Finally, there were the personal effects of the crew, including small bits of clothing and shoes together with bottles of ink and vanilla.
[21] The vessel was not ideally suited for the larger sections of the Yukon River; instead it had a short but successful career on Lake Laberge.
The people interviewed were Doug Davidge, Lindsey Thomas, Larry Bonnett, James Delgado, Donnie Reid, Tim Dowd and Val Monahan.
The film covered the history of the ship, the sinking, as well as, the discovery and work that went into the preservation of the artifacts found on the research trips in 2008 and 2009.