FLEET MEMORIAL & ARCHIVES
Decommissioned Fleet Museum
A record of the vessels that served the 52nd Exploratory Fleet. Though their nacelles are cold, their logs remain part of our enduring story.
Fleet Memorial & Archives
The 52nd Fleet defines itself by its stories. Though these nacelles are cold, their logs remain part of our enduring narrative.
Archive Navigation
Starbase Geneva
Completed and commissioned in 2405, serving as the headquarters for the 52nd Fleet. Located at a terminus of the Subspace River in the Beta Quadrant. Abandoned and destroyed when the new Starbase Geneva was completed.
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— Mission: Illuminati, Starbase Geneva, 2021
USS Cochrane
The Cochrane Research Facility was later transferred to a Meredith Class Starship, which was renamed USS Cochrane. The facility first discovered the Subspace River phenomenon before the transfer.
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— A Farewell to Things, USS Cochrane, 2019
USS Firebrande
One of the original vessels of the 52nd Fleet, the Firebrande served during the early integration period when the fleet was still establishing its multi-species operational doctrine. The ship's diverse crew roster included Klingon warriors from noble houses serving alongside Betazoid empaths and Human officers - a microcosm of the Federation's inclusive ideals. Though complete mission records have been lost to time, personnel files suggest the Firebrande specialized in cultural exchange and first contact scenarios where its unique crew composition proved invaluable.
"The meeting was ended and Remae was heading back to his ship to prepare for tomorrow's departure. before he walked out the large room, he was intercepted "I would like to come, sir. I don't get to fly that much on the station...", he said with a strange smile. "Sure thing Ensign, come on board by 0700 tomorrow, that's when we'll be departing," nodded Remae, as he headed out the door."
— Phoenix, USS Firebrande, 2019
USS Shenandoah
A ghost ship of the archives, the USS Shenandoah exists in fleet records but her complete operational history has been lost to time. Named for the historic Shenandoah Valley, she likely served during the 52nd Fleet's earliest days before digital record-keeping became standard practice. What we know is limited to personnel records and the simple fact that she existed, served, and was eventually retired. Like the valley for which she was named, the Shenandoah represents a quiet strength - ships that did their duty without fanfare, whose crews wrote history in actions rather than words.
