As far as I'm concerned it makes more sense that WNMHGB happens before the 5-year mission, in effect something of a trial period for a young Captain in only his second starship command before the ship is refit and launched on its 5-year voyage. And "in all the years I've known you" isn't at all specific enough as a reference.Is it possible that Where No Man Has Gone Before takes place in the first year of the five year mission..and when the next episode comes along, Corbormite or Man Trap or whatever, that two years have passed (uniform change--ship looks different) and that season one of TOS is actually year 3 of the show? This would make since, I think, with the quote from Kirk to Spock in Amok time (year 4 of five year mission) when he says "in all the years I have known you"..ect...
What do you think?
Rob
Scorpio
Also the excerpt from the Writer's Guide reprinted in The Making Of Star Trek says Kirk has commanded the Enterprise for about four years and TMoST was released between Seasons 2 and 3. That does lend support to the ship and equipment and personnel in WNMHGB looking distinctly different from the rest of the series. Add it up and that suggests Kirk got the Enterprise about two years before the refit and 5-year mission.
This is reference material during the show's production and I think has far more weight than anything written thirty some years after the fact. Meaning: the latter series like VOY and ENT have nothing of substance to say in regards to this. And that goes for the "official" chronology as well. I could make a good argument that the 5-year mission more likely started about 2270 or '71 rather than ended. 2265 was likely chosen more because it "tidily" resonated with 1965 around when WNMHGB was produced.