


Though the C’s Captain Rachel Garrett and her crew were thought to be killed, their act of sacrifice while protecting the Klingons was a key step in achieving peace between the Federation and the Klingon Empire. The Enterprise-C, the predecessor to Picard’s ship, was believed destroyed years earlier while protecting a Klingon outpost on Narendra III against a Romulan attack. “Time Squared”: Six hours in the future is a bad place to be for the Enterprise.Įnterprise-C and Alternate Timeline Enterprise-DThe Next Generation, “Yesterday’s Enterprise”In one of the greatest Star Trek episodes ever produced, “Yesterday’s Enterprise,” the arrival of a previous Enterprise - the NCC-1701-C - from the past causes history to be altered, resulting in Captain Picard and his crew living in a galaxy torn apart by war between the Federation and the Klingons.

It also gives Patrick Stewart the chance to shoot and kill Jean-Luc, which is no doubt something he’s wished he could do many times over the years. This gives the crew time to figure out what the heck is going on and avert the tragedy, though they’re less successful in understanding why this Picard from beyond is such a wuss. PossibleIn this not so great second-season episode of TNG, a Picard from six hours in the future arrives on the Enterprise of the present warning that the ship will be destroyed… you guessed it, six hours from now. As the Klingons beam onto the Enterprise to take command of her, Kirk’s gang beams off, and moments later the ship blows itself to hell. Zero!” he spits out, activating the oft-teased, never-before-used device. William Shatner’s Captain Kirk, desperate to save his crew and his best friend Spock - miraculously resurrected after the events of the previous film - must activate the auto-destruct sequence of his beloved ship, pulling a classic Kirk move in the process as he outwits his Klingon adversaries. Original EnterpriseStar Trek III: The Search for SpockThis is the original - and the only truly iconic - death of the Enterprise.
