Personnel
Kirk, James T.
James T. Kirk (ST-06)
James T. Kirk (ST-05)
James T. Kirk (ST-03)
James T. Kirk (ST-01)
James T. Kirk (TOS-15)
James T. Kirk (TOS-05)
James T. Kirk (TOS-01)
Young James T. Kirk (TAS-22)
Young James T. Kirk (ST-11)
James T. Kirk mutated (TAS-13)
James T. Kirk disguised as a Romulan (TOS-59)
James T. Kirk disguised as a Nazi (TOS-52)
James T. Kirk disguised as an Iotian (TOS-49)
James Tiberius Kirk was one of the most celebrated captains in the history of Starfleet, and his exploits became required reading at Starfleet Academy. Kirk spent most of his life in Starfleet, from the age of 17 when he entered Starfleet Academy until his death in the 24th century, saving the Veridian star system.[36]
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Cwan, Si
A prince exiled from the Thallonian Empire, he was beloved by some and targeted for death by others. But Si Cwan had his own agenda: a search for the one woman who meant the world to him.[1]
References
- 1. “House of Cards.” Star Trek: New Frontier, Book 1. Novel. Pocket Books. July 1997.
Compton
Compton (TOS-68)
Compton was part of a landing party which answered a distress call from the planet Scalos in 2268. When the young officer was exposed to the contaminated Scalosian water on the planet’s surface, he was phase-shifted to the level of the Scalosians in order to be used as a mate. The process quickly caused Compton to become passive and forget his Starfleet training; he tried to stop Captain Kirk, who had also been phase-shifted, from preventing the Scalosian sabotage of the U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701. Compton’s loyalty resurfaced when his captain’s life was threatened by one of the alien intruders. Unfortunately, Compton was injured by one of the Scalosians while leaping to Kirk’s defense; in his altered state, the smallest injury could prove fatal, and the lieutenant’s susceptibility to cellular damage caused him to rapidly age and die.[1]
Portrayed by Geoffrey Binney.
References
- 1. “Wink of an Eye.” Star Trek, Episode 68. Television. 29 November 1968.
Cochrane, Zefram
Zefram Cochrane (TOS-31)
Zefram Cochrane (ENT-01-02)
Zefram Cochrane (ST-08)
Zefram Cochrane was born on Earth, and lived through World War III before inventing the first warp-capable vessel. Of all the great inventors who have ever lived on the planet Earth, few can claim to have had as much impact on the course of human history as Zefram Cochrane. The amazing coincidence of choosing to make his first warp flight in his experimental ship, the Phoenix, on the same day that a Vulcan survey ship passed through Earth’s solar system, led to one of the most important moments in human history—the first meeting with an alien race. Cochrane’s discoveries ensured his place in history and ushered in a new era of peace and prosperity for mankind. In the following centuries, his theories and discoveries were taught in schools, some of which were named after him; his name was also given to units of measurement relating to warp physics.[2]
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Chell
Chell (VOY-116)
Chell served as an engineer aboard the U.S.S. Voyager NCC-74656. Chell, a talkative Bolian and former member of the Maquis, was picked by Chakotay for Tuvok‘s field-training class in late 2371.[1]
References
- 1. “Learning Curve.” Star Trek: Voyager, Episode 116. Television. 22 May 1995.
Chekov, Pavel
Pavel Chekov (ST-05)
Pavel Chekov (ST-01)
Pavel Chekov (TOS-42)
Pavel Andreievich Chekov, an only child, was born in 2245 in Pushkino, in the Russian Federation on Earth.[5] In 2262, at the age of 17, Chekov entered Starfleet Academy, one of his goals being the eventual command of a starship. While at the Academy, Chekov became involved with a young woman named Irina Galliulin, but the relationship did not last because Galliulin was uncomfortable with the structured way of life required by Starfleet.[6]
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Chapman, William
Lieutenant Chapman, an engineer aboard the U.S.S. Voyager NCC-74656, was selected by Seven of Nine for her first date, where he suffered a torn ligament while attempting to dance with her.[1] He later canceled a doubles ping pong game with Tom Paris against B’Elanna Torres and Harry Kim due to space sickness.[2]
Portrayed by Brian McNamara.
References
- 1. “Someone to Watch Over Me.” Star Trek: Voyager, Episode 216. Television. 28 April 1999.
- 2. “Relativity.” Star Trek: Voyager, Episode 218. Television. 12 May 1999.
Chapel, Christine
Dr. Christine Chapel (ST-04)
Dr. Christine Chapel (ST-01)
Nurse Christine Chapel (TOS-79)
Nurse Christine Chapel (TOS-09)
Christine Chapel signed up with Starfleet and was posted to the U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701 after her fiancé and teacher, Dr. Roger Korby, went missing and was presumed dead.[2] As a nurse on the Enterprise, Chapel proved to be an asset to Dr. McCoy‘s sickbay, maintaining a professional attitude in some difficult situations.[3] Chapel did not give up hope that she would find him alive, and she abandoned her career as a bio-researcher to serve in Starfleet in the hope that she would find her fiancé among the stars. Chapel believed that she had found Korby on Stardate 104280, but he had transferred his mind into an android body. After this mission, Chapel decided to remain aboard the Enterprise.[2] Her love for Korby had already started to find a new focus on the ship’s unobtainable Vulcan first officer, Commander Spock, but, much to her disappointment, he never seemed to return her interest.[1, 6] The closest that Chapel came to having a romantic encounter with Spock was when they were forced to kiss by the powerful Platonians.[4]
Following the end of Captain Kirk‘s first five-year mission aboard the Enterprise, Chapel returned to school and completed her degree as a medical doctor, and became the Chief Medical Officer aboard the ship, now commanded by Captain Will Decker, and replacing the now-retired Dr. McCoy.[7] She remained aboard following the V’Ger incident as a member of McCoy’s surgical staff before she accepted a promotion to lieutenant commander and a post at Starfleet Command.[8]
Portrayed by Majel Barrett Roddenberry.
ST11 Timeline
On Stardate 2258.42, Chapel served as a nurse in Sickbay aboard the U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701.[9]
Chapel appeared briefly in Star Trek (2009); after seeing the back of the head of a blonde nurse walk quickly across the screen, McCoy calls out an order for Nurse Chapel, and we hear a muffled “Yes, sir,” in response. The role was uncredited.
References
- 1. “The Naked Time.” Star Trek, Episode 6. Television. 29 September 1966.
- 2. “What Are Little Girls Made Of?.” Star Trek, Episode 9. Television. 20 October 1966.
- 3. “Operation: Annihilate!” Star Trek, Episode 29. Television. 13 April 1967.
- 4. “Plato’s Stepchildren.” Star Trek, Episode 67. Television. 22 November 1968.
- 5. “The Lorelei Signal.” Star Trek: The Animated Series, Episode 6. Television. 29 September 1973.
- 6. “Mudd’s Passion.” Star Trek: The Animated Series, Episode 8. Television. 10 November 1973.
- 7. Star Trek: The Motion Picture. Film. 7 December 1979.
- 8. Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home. Film. 26 November 1986.
- 9. Star Trek. Film. 8 May 2009.
Chang
One of the MACOs assigned to the Enterprise NX-01,[1] Corporal Chang was part of the mission to the Loque’eque homeworld.[2]
Portrayed by Daniel Dae Kim.
References
- 1. “The Xindi.” Star Trek: Enterprise, Episode 53. Television. 10 September 2003.
- 2. “Extinction.” Star Trek: Enterprise, Episode 55. Television. 24 September 2003.
Celes, Tal
Tal Celes (VOY-240)
Crewman Celes worked in Astrometrics under Seven of Nine. She always doubted her abilities to perform the necessary tasks of her job aboard the U.S.S. Voyager NCC-74656.[2] During a series of ship-wide system failures caused by an alien lifeform possessing Voyager, Seven assumed that Celes was responsible for compromising the ship’s systems while performing a diagnostic that Celes hadn’t even begun yet when the failures occurred.[3] Celes barely squeaked through her Starfleet training courses, and believed that she made it into Starfleet because it was politically correct, her instructors cutting her slack because she was Bajoran. She was referred to as Crewman Celes (implying “Celes” is her family name), and only her friend Billy Telfer called her Tal (implying “Tal” is her personal name),[2] therefore her name would be Celes Tal according to traditional Bajoran naming; it is likely that Celes was among those Bajorans who changed the order of their names for the benefit of non-Bajorans.[1]
Portrayed by Zoe McLellan.
References
- 1. “Ensign Ro.” Star Trek: The Next Generation, Episode 203. Television. 7 October 1991.
- 2. “Good Shepherd.” Star Trek: Voyager, Episode 240. Television. 15 March 2000.
- 3. “The Haunting of Deck Twelve.” Star Trek: Voyager, Episode 245. Television. 17 May 2000.
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