History portrayed Archer. Archer, the son of famed
warp engineer Henry Archer and his wife Sally, was born on August 4, 2112, in
Upstate New York, where he spent most of his formative years; he later claimed to have spent the majority of his life in San Francisco. The second-season episode "First Flight" depicts in flashback that he spent many years as a test pilot in the nascent Starfleet's NX program, based in San Francisco. His dreams of exploring started as a boy. As a youth, Archer earned the
Eagle Scout Award, along with 26
Merit Badges, from the
Boy Scouts of America. (Mentioned in the episode "
Rogue Planet".) He is an avid
water polo fan, and often relaxes by watching water polo games. Archer grew up with a distrust of
Vulcans, perceiving them as having held back humanity's progress, particularly with regard to his father's warp five project. As a
commander, Archer served as a test-pilot in the NX warp trials with A.G. Robinson, Duvall and Gardner. (All mentioned in the episode "
First Flight". It is assumed it is this Gardner who becomes
Admiral when
Maxwell Forrest dies in "
The Forge".) Robinson pushed the limits of a test ship, the NX-Alpha, resulting in its destruction. The Vulcans recommended terminating the warp trials, which Starfleet agreed to, until
Charles Tucker III (who would later serve as chief engineer under Archer) fixed the intermix ratios, and Archer and Robinson took the NX-Beta, the second test ship, without clearance to prove its readiness. The suspension of Archer did not completely stop the progress of the
Enterprise's construction, as the program eventually resumed after a six-month halt.
Seasons 1 and 2 As a man who loves to travel amongst the stars, Archer learns that being captain is a larger duty than manager and
astronomer. He ran into species from all over the
quadrant trying to kill him and his crew. Encounters with the Mazarites,
Xindi,
Tholians,
Suliban and
Klingons caused Archer to become more of a military commander. In addition, Archer learns that the duties of captain include being a diplomat. During Seasons 1 and 2, he is somewhat uncomfortable with this role, especially in the episode "
A Night in Sickbay" when his pet beagle,
Porthos, contracts a deadly illness on an alien world. While exploring, Archer becomes an enemy of the Klingons. In a dispute with the
Klingon Empire in 2152, he is convicted and sentenced to exile on
Rura Penthe, even though he is innocent of the charges and despite the Klingons having acknowledged his previous service to the Empire. With his escape, a
bounty is put on Archer's head and tensions with the Klingon Empire increase. Also during this period, Archer has the distinction of making
Earth's official
first contact with dozens of
alien races, including the Akaali, the
Andorians,
Axanar, Suliban,
Tandarans,
Tellarites, Tholians,
Xindi and
Romulans.
Temporal Cold War Although initially optimistic, Archer becomes involved in his first mission as captain of
Enterprise in the middle of the
Temporal Cold War. The Temporal Cold War begins at the beginning of the pilot episode, "
Broken Bow". In that episode, the audience is introduced to the
Suliban and a mysterious being from the future (informally referred to as "Future Guy") who is guiding them. As the Temporal Cold War continues, Archer also meets
Daniels, whose purpose seemingly is to safeguard Archer in particular and
Enterprise in general. Daniels' comments are that Archer will be the man who helps form the
United Federation of Planets, and it becomes apparent by the third season that Daniels is representing the Federation throughout the Temporal Cold War.
Season 3 In Season 3, he was the military commander in the Expanse. Following the
Xindi attack on
Earth in 2153, Archer becomes a changed man. No longer a congenial captain, he is now driven and determined to seek out and confront the perpetrators. Archer commits desperate, controversial acts of questionable morality to ensure a future for Earth, including
torturing a prisoner,
cloning Tucker to harvest body parts to save the chief engineer and thus killing the clone, and
stealing a vital warp coil and leaving a ship of aliens stranded in space. While on his mission to locate the Xindi, Archer is briefly
transformed into a member of the extinct Loque'eque by a mutagenic virus. Later, he is infected by
subspace parasites, creating an
alternate timeline in which the
Enterprise's mission fails and the Xindi succeed in destroying Earth (although the nature of these parasites mean that this timeline is erased when Phlox's cure for Archer erases the parasites themselves from history). With the help of
Daniels, Archer, along with
T'Pol,
travels back in time to the year 2004 to prevent the release of a Xindi-Reptilian
bio-weapon. By the end of the season, Archer is
presumed dead when the Xindi superweapon is destroyed, after having convinced three of the five Xindi races that reports of humanity's future conflict with them are wrong. However, in reality, he is transported back to the early 1940s during World War II, as is the
Enterprise.
Season 4 After returning home in 2154, Archer helps a faction of
Vulcans fight an oppressive government on their planet. During this incident, he is the recipient of the
katra, or living spirit, of the great Vulcan philosopher
Surak. The
katra is later transferred to a Vulcan priest, and Archer is left unharmed. This leads to the reformation of Vulcan society, and explains why the Vulcans of Archer's time were so different from the Vulcans of
Kirk's time. In the process, Archer becomes the first known Human participant in a Vulcan
mind meld. Since that experience, he has used that knowledge at least once: To assist
T'Pol with conducting her first mind meld to gain information about who kidnapped
Dr. Phlox (the episode "
Affliction"). Archer is also involved in one of the first, and possibly most significant, treaties yet, being asked to escort Gral, the
Tellarite ambassador, to the Tellarite-
Andorian negotiations. En route, he and his crew run into the Andorian
Shran, a long-time friend/enemy/ally. During Shran's stay,
Romulans attack and cause the fragile alliance to crash to a halt. In the mix-up, a Tellarite kills Shran's lover
Talas, and Shran avenges her death by demanding the Tellarite who killed her to fight to the death. In an attempt to protect the fragile peace treaty, Archer takes the challenge instead and Shran is incapacitated. The alliance remains intact, and soon evolves into the
United Federation of Planets. ("
Babel One", "
United", "
The Aenar", "
Demons", "
Terra Prime", "
These Are the Voyages...").
Place in history The time traveler
Daniels revealed that Archer would eventually have a major role in the founding of the
United Federation of Planets in 2161. He briefly took Archer ahead in time to the point where Archer is about to sign the Federation accords on
Earth, expanded further in the series finale. Archer's fate is revealed in the episode "
In a Mirror, Darkly, Part II" when a computer information screen aboard the 23rd century
Starfleet vessel USS
Defiant is briefly visible. According to the computer profile, Archer was an
Admiral and Chief of Staff at
Starfleet Command at the time of his retirement. He later went on to serve as ambassador to
Andoria from 2165 to 2175. From 2175 to 2183, Archer served as a member of the Federation Council, followed by eight years as Federation
President (2184–2192). He was also an honorary member of the Andorian Imperial Guard. Historian
John Gill considered Archer "the greatest explorer of the 22nd century." The same computer display states that Archer's Planet and Archer IV (mentioned in "
Yesterday's Enterprise" and "
Strange New World" respectively) were named after him. Unused production artwork would have shown that Archer dies peacefully in his sleep at his home in
Upstate New York in 2245, exactly one day after he attends the commissioning ceremony of the . However, this biographical computer display contained a number of discrepancies, including listing 2160 as the year that Archer's captaincy of
Enterprise came to an end. The series later established that Archer's command ended in 2161, as seen in the series finale, "
These Are the Voyages...". At least three starships were named after him: the
Archer-class scout ship featured in the tie-in novel series
Star Trek: Vanguard and its follow-up
Star Trek: Seekers, an unspecified ship alluded to in
Star Trek: Nemesis and the USS Archer NCC-627 in the pilot episode of
Star Trek: Strange New Worlds. Archer Spacedock from
Star Trek: Discovery is also named for Jonathan Archer. The 2009
Star Trek film briefly references Archer, as
Montgomery Scott receives punishment stemming from an incident involving a
transporter and "Admiral Archer's prized beagle." There was some confusion as to if this actually referred to Jonathan Archer himself as this would make him 141 years old.
Star Trek writer Bob Orci went on record to clear up the issue, "Admiral Archer is a reference to the Archer we all know and love, and yes he would be over 100, which is a likely life expectancy in a futuristic space faring race of humans (as depicted by McCoy's (
DeForest Kelley, playing the 137 year old Admiral) appearance in
The Next Generation.)" In the
Star Trek: Discovery episode "
Choose Your Pain", Archer is shown listed on the Starfleet Database as one of Starfleet's most decorated Captains as of 2256. Also included in the list are: Robert April, Matthew Decker, Philippa Georgiou, and
Christopher Pike.
Porthos Porthos is Archer's dog. One of four males born in a litter of English
Beagles, Porthos and his brothers, Athos, Aramis and d'Artagnan, were named after characters from
The Three Musketeers by
Alexandre Dumas, père. He has been Archer's faithful companion since the age of six weeks, and has remained so for the duration of Archer's 10-year assignment as
captain of
Enterprise. Porthos was portrayed by a male beagle named Prada in Season 1. Afterwards, he was played by a further two female beagles, Breezy and Windy, although the character of Porthos remained male. Archer would occasionally leave Porthos in the care of
Dr. Phlox when he was away or otherwise unavailable. Archer cares very much for Porthos. In the
pilot episode,
Travis Mayweather says Archer won't use the
transporter for himself and certainly not for his dog. In "
A Night in Sickbay", Porthos nearly dies when he contracts a deadly
pathogen on the
Kreetassan homeworld, but is saved when Phlox
transplants a gland from a
chameleon-like creature. In "
Similitude", Archer explains in answer to the question "Can he do any tricks?" that "I haven't taught him any, mostly what he does is eat, sleep and not fetch." He also commented "there's nothing Porthos likes more than dinner time". Although Porthos is not the first domesticated pet to be featured in a
Star Trek series (
Data owned a cat,
Spot, in
Star Trek: The Next Generation and Captain Jean-Luc Picard owned a
lionfish named Livingston), Porthos has the distinction of being the first pet to maintain an ongoing presence in the series, and even – as illustrated above – become the focus of an episode. In the
Mirror Universe depicted in "
In a Mirror, Darkly", Porthos is a
Rottweiler. According to the episode's
podcast on
Startrek.com, the dog that portrayed the mirror Porthos was known on set as an even bigger "baby" than the dogs which have played the regular Porthos. Episode writer
Mike Sussman noted that the animal was "The sweetest dog I have ever met." In the episode "
Acquisition", Porthos was interrogated by a group of
Ferengi pirates while the rest of the crew were incapacitated, but the aliens'
universal translator could not decipher his barking. The pirates didn't know what to make of the dog, even speculating that he was perhaps food. They then decided they could sell him to a zoo.
Brannon Braga's nephew had a dog named Porthos, which he thought was good name for a dog and took as inspiration for Archer's dog. ==Mirror Universe==