Hi, all. I was inspired by the TNG ep Parallels to write a series of alternate crews for our good ship Enterprise. One of the things I propose is that Enterprise is not the sole flagship of the Federation, but one of several designated as flagships -- something implied in Chain of Command. I hope you'll join me in submitting some of your own crew creations.
Here goes the first one, which features O'Brien as Enterprise captain:
[In this quantum universe, there are a number of key changes. First, Miles O’Brien becomes Enterprise captain after changing his career path from a noncommissioned officer to a commissioned officer, partly at Captain Maxwell’s urging. More importantly, the Cardassians’ history is altered after Starfleet makes first contact with them more than 100 years ago, before the military took over their society after the breakdown of the previous civilization, the Hibitians, and embarked on their bloody campaign to become a powerful empire. The Cardassians learn of the Federation through this earlier contact with Starfleet and petition for provisional membership. This entitles Cardassia to partake of emergency aid to rebuild their shattered society, leading to much less suffering for the Cardassian people. It also means they never turn to their military to solve their problems, nor do they embark on missions of conquest to gain natural resources, such as their conquest of Bajor. It also means the Cardassians eventually become a culture that reveres scientific research and artistic expression, and it’s not restricted to the female members of their society, as in the more familiar Cardassia. Both genders participate in this more pacific society, with physicians and scientists occupying the top rungs of their transformed society, led by a democratic, parliamentary form of government whose top leader is called First Minister. It also means that at first, Cardassians don’t wish to join Starfleet because of its militaristic bent. This leads to a very different but unusual history for Bajor as they fall under the somewhat benign yet subtle commercial domination of the Ferengi. That “reign” luckily only lasts 35 years rather than 60 years of brutal oppression and destruction of Bajor’s natural resources. Other changes: Data is a humanoid, not an android; Troi is CMO; and there are a small number of Cardassians serving in Starfleet.]
Captain Miles Edward O’Brien (Commanding Officer). This O’Brien’s career is identical to the one we know up to a point after serving with Captain Ben Maxwell on the Rutledge. O’Brien was an enlisted man, a chief petty officer Maxwell made a junior tactical officer despite his noncom rank. They didn’t fight the Cardassians because of their different history in this universe, but they did see action against the Tzenkethi (thus, the Tzenkethi become the object of O’Brien’s enmity instead of the Cardassians).
After a brutal assault on Setlik III by the Tzenkethi on colonists, O’Brien began to reassess his career, thinking he could have more of an impact in Starfleet as a commissioned officer rather than as a noncommissioned officer. After a long talk with the captain, Maxwell convinces O’Brien to accept a field promotion to ensign and at the first opportunity, sponsor him to join Starfleet’s equivalent of the Officer Training Corps. O’Brien serves a few years with Maxwell, who makes him senior tactical officer now that he has a field commission, and rises to the rank of full lieutenant before returning to Earth to receive additional training as an officer, including Starfleet’s special tactical training program. O’Brien is promoted to lieutenant commander and returns to duty on the Rutledge under Captain Maxwell as senior tactical officer, serving a few more years.
He serves on a few starships, including with Captain Leyton of the Okinawa who makes him second officer, then O’Brien becomes first officer of the Hood under Captain Robert DeSoto.Starfleet is abuzz about the new Galaxy-class starship project, and O’Brien sees his opportunity. As he has both tactical and engineering experience, he asks DeSoto to recommend him to head up construction of Enterprise based on his experience.
Six months before that happens, DeSoto is promoted by Admiral Gregory Quinn to become Rear Admiral and Commandant of Starfleet Academy. The ambitious DeSoto, who would like to one day be head of Starfleet, accepts and promotes O’Brien to be the Hood’s next captain. O’Brien then gets the Enterprise assignment and, with both Captain Maxwell’s and Rear Admiral DeSoto’s recommendations, Rear Admiral Norah Satie promotes O’Brien to take command of Enterprise, which becomes a new Starfleet flagship. O’Brien brings some of his officers on the Hood with him to his new command. Like our O’Brien, he enjoys building model starships, and has displayed his models of all the Federation starships called Enterprise in his ready room.
Commander Michael Eddington (First Officer & Strategic Operations Officer). While this Eddington also starts out in the security track, he meets O’Brien and Leyton on the Okinawa while a lieutenant and security chief. They both convince the Canadian officer that he should transfer to command and then take the first senior post available—O’Brien says if he could get over being a noncom to become a commissioned officer, certainly Eddington could transfer to the command track.
Eddington gets that chance when O’Brien is promoted to first officer of the Hood and on his recommendation, Eddington becomes second officer as well as strategic operations officer, occupying the third chair on the Hood’s bridge (means all three officers in the center seat positions are command officers). O’Brien promises him he’ll make him his first officer when he receives his first command, which happens sooner than expected.
O’Brien briefly becomes the Hood’s captain after DeSoto becomes Commandant of Starfleet Academy, so he promotes Eddington to first officer and keeps him as strategic operations officer, helping coordinate starship movements in their sector with Starfleet Command. Then, he becomes O’Brien’s Number One on Enterprise (like Picard, O’Brien also calls him Number One, being something of a military traditionalist). As on the Hood, Eddington remains strategic operations officer, an even more important post as they serve on a Starfleet flagship and therefore, coordinate starship movements and strategy for more sectors. This Eddington is not tempted by the Maquis and remains loyal to Starfleet.
Lieutenant Commander Data (Second Officer & Chief Science Officer). This Data is much like the one we know except for a major difference. He isn’t an android—he is a humanoid, a synthetically created being, essentially grown in a sophisticated biological growth camber of Soong’s devising—a test tube person. Dr. Noonian Soong’s ancestor Arik didn’t abandon his biological research; instead, he took it in a different direction, intending to create a synthetic humanoid with some of the characteristics of his augments—great strength, incredible intelligence and memory capacity, but capable of being “programmed”—essentially, a biological computer with few of the emotional impediments that made the augments unstable like arrogance and ruthlessness.
It takes a few generations of work but his descendant, Noonian Soong, took up this project, and eventually succeeded in creating the first organic computer mind, also positronic. Soong then constructed a synthetic biological humanoid form for it. This Data does look much like the one we know, as Soong used his own genetic profile as a physical template, only he has black hair and silver-gray eyes, along with a more silvery than golden complexion, due to an accidental genetic quirk in his artificial body. Much like a Vulcan, this Data is perplexed by humanoid emotions and fears, as he has such a precise computer-like mind devoid of strong emotions, but is capable of them and slowly learns to express them in a positive way.
Soong programmed this Data with fewer negative emotions, and as a result, he is generally more peaceful than most humanoids. He is more vulnerable than the Data we know, despite the fact he has even more of the strength, speed, and reflexes of a Khan-type superhuman augment. Also, as a biological humanoid, he can also procreate like any person. As his abilities are similar to the familiar Data we know, he has a similar career, rising through the ranks in the sciences. O’Brien recruits him to be second officer and chief science officer.
O’Brien is intrigued by Data’s record and while his seeming unfamiliarity with human foibles can be irritating, O’Brien becomes his unofficial “professor of the humanities.” Instead of an operations console at the front of the bridge, Data mans the main science console, while operations is a substation, manned by a more junior ops officer, located at one of the rear stations. He also wears a sciences blue uniform. Data had been chief science officer on board the Victory, where he met Geordi; they are good friends, as a result.
Dr. Deanna Troi (Chief Medical Officer, Rank: Lieutenant Commander). In this universe, Deanna studied medicine instead of psychology at Betazed’s prominent First Medical Institute. She first serves as a civilian doctor, joining first the Federation’s version of the modern-day Doctors Without Borders, which assisted people from all across the Alpha Quadrant suffering from planet-wide disasters or wars. Then, at the behest of her father, Ian Andrew, she joined Starfleet Medical.
After a few stints serving as a junior medical officer, she meets O’Brien on the Hood when he’s first officer and she is deputy chief medical officer. They become good friends and he tells her that when he receives his first command, he’ll make her his chief medical officer. That happens sooner than expected when DeSoto becomes Commandant of Starfleet Academy and takes his CMO with him to take charge of training at the Starfleet Medical branch of the Academy. O’Brien then appoints Troi as CMO on the Hood, and when he receives command of Enterprise he appoints her CMO. Her empathic nature is a bit of a dual-edged sword for a physician. She can feel the pain of her patients, which she then has to control in order to more effectively treat them. It also gives her a unique kind of “I feel your pain” bedside manner. (Like most CMOs, she wears the blue “doctor’s tunic” Dr. Crusher wore in the familiar universe.)
Counselor Geordi LaForge (Ship’s Counselor, Rank: Lieutenant Commander). As in the universe where Geordi becomes a physician, he first attends medical school, but becomes a psychiatrist. Having a technical mind devoted to medical research, Geordi develops diagnostic equipment based on his VISOR to help detect hard-to-discern mental illnesses with a physiological basis. After serving on a few starships as a junior counselor, most recently on board the Victory, Data’s previous ship, he sits in the third chair, at first wearing a civilian jumpsuit as he did on other assignments, but finds Captain O’Brien would prefer he wear his Starfleet uniform—of course, the young, up-and-coming senior counselor complies, as Captain O’Brien is something of a hero to the young, recently promoted officer.
O’Brien knows that Geordi’s VISOR enables him to discern the emotional states of most beings he comes into contact with, a valuable asset in a tense situation. Geordi also uses his VISOR in his therapy sessions with the crew and civilians he treats, while openly telling them his VISOR has that capability. Strangely, that—plus his penchant for wearing civilian clothes during therapy sessions—helps put his patients’ minds at ease. He often works closely with Data, intrigued by the humanoid’s different view of the humanities or “fellow humanoids,” as he calls them.
Lieutenant Commander Sarah McDougal (Chief Engineering Officer). MacDougal, as in the familiar universe, served at the time in a rotating group of chief engineers. While not canon, but considered fanon, MacDougal, along with Argyle, Lynch, and Logan, were all part of an experimental program to train several engineers at once to become more familiar with the specs of the Galaxy-class engines; indeed, they all served on the initial Galaxy-class construction program before receiving this temporary posting. This way, they could spread their expertise to other ships with similar engine designs, such as other Galaxy-class ships as well as the Nebula-class and other subsequent designs. Eventually, at the end of this one-year pilot program, Captain O’Brien decided to make MacDougal Enterprise’s permanent chief engineer for the rest of its mission. She and Dr. Troi eventually become best friends, and she even is able to make friends with the frosty, coolly efficient Vulcan helm officer Selar.
Lieutenant Damar (Chief Security Officer). This Damar, growing up in a different, civilian-run Cardassia Prime, is nonetheless fascinated by tales of the ancient Hibitian warrior-kings, and thus is a student of war and military tactics. As one of only the second group of Cardassians to attend Starfleet Academy, he has a rare status, but he was also influenced by a family friend who was the first Cardassian to join Starfleet: Dukat (This Dukat will become Commander of Deep Space Nine and the Emissary, in a tie-in quantum universe where the Bajorans are actually allies of the Federation and the Cardassians).
Damar becomes close friends with Selar, the ship’s senior helm officer, as he admires the Vulcan’s cool reserve and wise counsel—she always seems to know how to calm the sometimes hot-headed Cardassian, who’s always ready to pull a phaser and defend his captain and his ship. Damar also has great respect for Captain O’Brien, admiring his exploits in Starfleet aboard the Hood especially.
Lieutenant Selar (Senior Helm Officer). This Selar did not attend medical school, disappointing her parents—her father is a physician and her mother a biochemist. They hoped she would follow in her footsteps, but Selar studied the careers of Vulcan officers who attended the command track and found the path logical and admirable. After a few short starship hitches, one as a helm officer on the Victory, O’Brien requested her as the ship’s senior helm officer. She had just successfully completed training at Starfleet’s advanced tactical operations school, where her highly logical mind and vast intelligence enabled her to excel, earning top grades. Selar especially did well in exercises coordinating helm course corrections with tactical defenses. Upon successfully graduating, she was promoted to full lieutenant. O’Brien thought she would make an excellent away team mission commander as well as his top conn officer. He tells her he’s been following her career and that when the time was right, he would sponsor her for promotion.
She does become close friends with hot-headed Security Chief Damar, as she finds him highly intelligent despite his emotions. She even teaches him some basic Vulcan meditation techniques which help Damar maintain his self-control, and she finds the Cardassian is a fast study when it comes to these skills. Because of her cross-training, Damar trusts her to take over tactical from time to time; they also create a number of battle simulations on the holodeck to keep the crew on its toes. Selar finds she is most comfortable with Data as a crewmate, as the humanoid is quite calm, logical, and barely emotional, something she finds refreshing.
Here goes the first one, which features O'Brien as Enterprise captain:
[In this quantum universe, there are a number of key changes. First, Miles O’Brien becomes Enterprise captain after changing his career path from a noncommissioned officer to a commissioned officer, partly at Captain Maxwell’s urging. More importantly, the Cardassians’ history is altered after Starfleet makes first contact with them more than 100 years ago, before the military took over their society after the breakdown of the previous civilization, the Hibitians, and embarked on their bloody campaign to become a powerful empire. The Cardassians learn of the Federation through this earlier contact with Starfleet and petition for provisional membership. This entitles Cardassia to partake of emergency aid to rebuild their shattered society, leading to much less suffering for the Cardassian people. It also means they never turn to their military to solve their problems, nor do they embark on missions of conquest to gain natural resources, such as their conquest of Bajor. It also means the Cardassians eventually become a culture that reveres scientific research and artistic expression, and it’s not restricted to the female members of their society, as in the more familiar Cardassia. Both genders participate in this more pacific society, with physicians and scientists occupying the top rungs of their transformed society, led by a democratic, parliamentary form of government whose top leader is called First Minister. It also means that at first, Cardassians don’t wish to join Starfleet because of its militaristic bent. This leads to a very different but unusual history for Bajor as they fall under the somewhat benign yet subtle commercial domination of the Ferengi. That “reign” luckily only lasts 35 years rather than 60 years of brutal oppression and destruction of Bajor’s natural resources. Other changes: Data is a humanoid, not an android; Troi is CMO; and there are a small number of Cardassians serving in Starfleet.]
Captain Miles Edward O’Brien (Commanding Officer). This O’Brien’s career is identical to the one we know up to a point after serving with Captain Ben Maxwell on the Rutledge. O’Brien was an enlisted man, a chief petty officer Maxwell made a junior tactical officer despite his noncom rank. They didn’t fight the Cardassians because of their different history in this universe, but they did see action against the Tzenkethi (thus, the Tzenkethi become the object of O’Brien’s enmity instead of the Cardassians).
After a brutal assault on Setlik III by the Tzenkethi on colonists, O’Brien began to reassess his career, thinking he could have more of an impact in Starfleet as a commissioned officer rather than as a noncommissioned officer. After a long talk with the captain, Maxwell convinces O’Brien to accept a field promotion to ensign and at the first opportunity, sponsor him to join Starfleet’s equivalent of the Officer Training Corps. O’Brien serves a few years with Maxwell, who makes him senior tactical officer now that he has a field commission, and rises to the rank of full lieutenant before returning to Earth to receive additional training as an officer, including Starfleet’s special tactical training program. O’Brien is promoted to lieutenant commander and returns to duty on the Rutledge under Captain Maxwell as senior tactical officer, serving a few more years.
He serves on a few starships, including with Captain Leyton of the Okinawa who makes him second officer, then O’Brien becomes first officer of the Hood under Captain Robert DeSoto.Starfleet is abuzz about the new Galaxy-class starship project, and O’Brien sees his opportunity. As he has both tactical and engineering experience, he asks DeSoto to recommend him to head up construction of Enterprise based on his experience.
Six months before that happens, DeSoto is promoted by Admiral Gregory Quinn to become Rear Admiral and Commandant of Starfleet Academy. The ambitious DeSoto, who would like to one day be head of Starfleet, accepts and promotes O’Brien to be the Hood’s next captain. O’Brien then gets the Enterprise assignment and, with both Captain Maxwell’s and Rear Admiral DeSoto’s recommendations, Rear Admiral Norah Satie promotes O’Brien to take command of Enterprise, which becomes a new Starfleet flagship. O’Brien brings some of his officers on the Hood with him to his new command. Like our O’Brien, he enjoys building model starships, and has displayed his models of all the Federation starships called Enterprise in his ready room.
Commander Michael Eddington (First Officer & Strategic Operations Officer). While this Eddington also starts out in the security track, he meets O’Brien and Leyton on the Okinawa while a lieutenant and security chief. They both convince the Canadian officer that he should transfer to command and then take the first senior post available—O’Brien says if he could get over being a noncom to become a commissioned officer, certainly Eddington could transfer to the command track.
Eddington gets that chance when O’Brien is promoted to first officer of the Hood and on his recommendation, Eddington becomes second officer as well as strategic operations officer, occupying the third chair on the Hood’s bridge (means all three officers in the center seat positions are command officers). O’Brien promises him he’ll make him his first officer when he receives his first command, which happens sooner than expected.
O’Brien briefly becomes the Hood’s captain after DeSoto becomes Commandant of Starfleet Academy, so he promotes Eddington to first officer and keeps him as strategic operations officer, helping coordinate starship movements in their sector with Starfleet Command. Then, he becomes O’Brien’s Number One on Enterprise (like Picard, O’Brien also calls him Number One, being something of a military traditionalist). As on the Hood, Eddington remains strategic operations officer, an even more important post as they serve on a Starfleet flagship and therefore, coordinate starship movements and strategy for more sectors. This Eddington is not tempted by the Maquis and remains loyal to Starfleet.
Lieutenant Commander Data (Second Officer & Chief Science Officer). This Data is much like the one we know except for a major difference. He isn’t an android—he is a humanoid, a synthetically created being, essentially grown in a sophisticated biological growth camber of Soong’s devising—a test tube person. Dr. Noonian Soong’s ancestor Arik didn’t abandon his biological research; instead, he took it in a different direction, intending to create a synthetic humanoid with some of the characteristics of his augments—great strength, incredible intelligence and memory capacity, but capable of being “programmed”—essentially, a biological computer with few of the emotional impediments that made the augments unstable like arrogance and ruthlessness.
It takes a few generations of work but his descendant, Noonian Soong, took up this project, and eventually succeeded in creating the first organic computer mind, also positronic. Soong then constructed a synthetic biological humanoid form for it. This Data does look much like the one we know, as Soong used his own genetic profile as a physical template, only he has black hair and silver-gray eyes, along with a more silvery than golden complexion, due to an accidental genetic quirk in his artificial body. Much like a Vulcan, this Data is perplexed by humanoid emotions and fears, as he has such a precise computer-like mind devoid of strong emotions, but is capable of them and slowly learns to express them in a positive way.
Soong programmed this Data with fewer negative emotions, and as a result, he is generally more peaceful than most humanoids. He is more vulnerable than the Data we know, despite the fact he has even more of the strength, speed, and reflexes of a Khan-type superhuman augment. Also, as a biological humanoid, he can also procreate like any person. As his abilities are similar to the familiar Data we know, he has a similar career, rising through the ranks in the sciences. O’Brien recruits him to be second officer and chief science officer.
O’Brien is intrigued by Data’s record and while his seeming unfamiliarity with human foibles can be irritating, O’Brien becomes his unofficial “professor of the humanities.” Instead of an operations console at the front of the bridge, Data mans the main science console, while operations is a substation, manned by a more junior ops officer, located at one of the rear stations. He also wears a sciences blue uniform. Data had been chief science officer on board the Victory, where he met Geordi; they are good friends, as a result.
Dr. Deanna Troi (Chief Medical Officer, Rank: Lieutenant Commander). In this universe, Deanna studied medicine instead of psychology at Betazed’s prominent First Medical Institute. She first serves as a civilian doctor, joining first the Federation’s version of the modern-day Doctors Without Borders, which assisted people from all across the Alpha Quadrant suffering from planet-wide disasters or wars. Then, at the behest of her father, Ian Andrew, she joined Starfleet Medical.
After a few stints serving as a junior medical officer, she meets O’Brien on the Hood when he’s first officer and she is deputy chief medical officer. They become good friends and he tells her that when he receives his first command, he’ll make her his chief medical officer. That happens sooner than expected when DeSoto becomes Commandant of Starfleet Academy and takes his CMO with him to take charge of training at the Starfleet Medical branch of the Academy. O’Brien then appoints Troi as CMO on the Hood, and when he receives command of Enterprise he appoints her CMO. Her empathic nature is a bit of a dual-edged sword for a physician. She can feel the pain of her patients, which she then has to control in order to more effectively treat them. It also gives her a unique kind of “I feel your pain” bedside manner. (Like most CMOs, she wears the blue “doctor’s tunic” Dr. Crusher wore in the familiar universe.)
Counselor Geordi LaForge (Ship’s Counselor, Rank: Lieutenant Commander). As in the universe where Geordi becomes a physician, he first attends medical school, but becomes a psychiatrist. Having a technical mind devoted to medical research, Geordi develops diagnostic equipment based on his VISOR to help detect hard-to-discern mental illnesses with a physiological basis. After serving on a few starships as a junior counselor, most recently on board the Victory, Data’s previous ship, he sits in the third chair, at first wearing a civilian jumpsuit as he did on other assignments, but finds Captain O’Brien would prefer he wear his Starfleet uniform—of course, the young, up-and-coming senior counselor complies, as Captain O’Brien is something of a hero to the young, recently promoted officer.
O’Brien knows that Geordi’s VISOR enables him to discern the emotional states of most beings he comes into contact with, a valuable asset in a tense situation. Geordi also uses his VISOR in his therapy sessions with the crew and civilians he treats, while openly telling them his VISOR has that capability. Strangely, that—plus his penchant for wearing civilian clothes during therapy sessions—helps put his patients’ minds at ease. He often works closely with Data, intrigued by the humanoid’s different view of the humanities or “fellow humanoids,” as he calls them.
Lieutenant Commander Sarah McDougal (Chief Engineering Officer). MacDougal, as in the familiar universe, served at the time in a rotating group of chief engineers. While not canon, but considered fanon, MacDougal, along with Argyle, Lynch, and Logan, were all part of an experimental program to train several engineers at once to become more familiar with the specs of the Galaxy-class engines; indeed, they all served on the initial Galaxy-class construction program before receiving this temporary posting. This way, they could spread their expertise to other ships with similar engine designs, such as other Galaxy-class ships as well as the Nebula-class and other subsequent designs. Eventually, at the end of this one-year pilot program, Captain O’Brien decided to make MacDougal Enterprise’s permanent chief engineer for the rest of its mission. She and Dr. Troi eventually become best friends, and she even is able to make friends with the frosty, coolly efficient Vulcan helm officer Selar.
Lieutenant Damar (Chief Security Officer). This Damar, growing up in a different, civilian-run Cardassia Prime, is nonetheless fascinated by tales of the ancient Hibitian warrior-kings, and thus is a student of war and military tactics. As one of only the second group of Cardassians to attend Starfleet Academy, he has a rare status, but he was also influenced by a family friend who was the first Cardassian to join Starfleet: Dukat (This Dukat will become Commander of Deep Space Nine and the Emissary, in a tie-in quantum universe where the Bajorans are actually allies of the Federation and the Cardassians).
Damar becomes close friends with Selar, the ship’s senior helm officer, as he admires the Vulcan’s cool reserve and wise counsel—she always seems to know how to calm the sometimes hot-headed Cardassian, who’s always ready to pull a phaser and defend his captain and his ship. Damar also has great respect for Captain O’Brien, admiring his exploits in Starfleet aboard the Hood especially.
Lieutenant Selar (Senior Helm Officer). This Selar did not attend medical school, disappointing her parents—her father is a physician and her mother a biochemist. They hoped she would follow in her footsteps, but Selar studied the careers of Vulcan officers who attended the command track and found the path logical and admirable. After a few short starship hitches, one as a helm officer on the Victory, O’Brien requested her as the ship’s senior helm officer. She had just successfully completed training at Starfleet’s advanced tactical operations school, where her highly logical mind and vast intelligence enabled her to excel, earning top grades. Selar especially did well in exercises coordinating helm course corrections with tactical defenses. Upon successfully graduating, she was promoted to full lieutenant. O’Brien thought she would make an excellent away team mission commander as well as his top conn officer. He tells her he’s been following her career and that when the time was right, he would sponsor her for promotion.
She does become close friends with hot-headed Security Chief Damar, as she finds him highly intelligent despite his emotions. She even teaches him some basic Vulcan meditation techniques which help Damar maintain his self-control, and she finds the Cardassian is a fast study when it comes to these skills. Because of her cross-training, Damar trusts her to take over tactical from time to time; they also create a number of battle simulations on the holodeck to keep the crew on its toes. Selar finds she is most comfortable with Data as a crewmate, as the humanoid is quite calm, logical, and barely emotional, something she finds refreshing.