Matt Jefferies

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Walter Matthew "Matt" Jefferies (August 12, 1921 - July 21, 2003) was an aviation and mechanical artist, set designer and writer, best known for designing the original starship Enterprise for the Star Trek television series.

Jefferies' father was chief engineer at a power plant in Virginia. He had a younger brother named John who worked with him as his chief draftsman. He served in Europe in World War II, was inside of B-17, B-24, B-25 bombers and had four years as a flight test engineer. He was a member of the Aviation Space Writers' Association and one of the original members of the American Aviation Historical Society. Jefferies restored and flew period airplanes as a hobby. He owned a Waco aircraft and stored it at an airfield in California for many years.

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[edit] Star Trek

Besides creating the Enterprise (interiors & exterior), Jefferies was responsible for designing props (including phasers), sets, and the Klingon logo and D-7 battle cruiser. Years later, his concept sketches were revisited and used to design the starship Enterprise, the Olympic class U.S.S. Pasteur, the Daedalus class, and pre-Federation Vulcan ships. Contrary to popular belief, Jefferies did not create Star Trek's original shuttlecraft design; although Jefferies submitted his own concept, it was too complex to build with show's shoestring budget. Gene Winfield's much simpler design was used instead, and Jefferies designed only its interior.[1]

He had a very pragmatic design ethic.

  • Reasoning that a starship's engines would be extremely powerful and potentially dangerous, he positioned them far away from the ship, with the added benefit of modular design so that they could be ejected quickly in an emergency.
  • Figuring that whatever could go wrong would, he put all of the ship's workings on the interior for easy access, eliminating the need for spacewalking for exterior repairs.
  • The bridge panels were given an ergonomic design for comfort and ease of use.
  • He was opposed to the idea of PADDs, as well as the goose-neck viewers that appeared in the first pilot.[citation needed]
  • He disliked the idea of a large engine room, because by his reckoning the entire ship could be run by a single panel on the bridge.[citation needed]

Jefferies' work on the bridge of the Enterprise influenced the design of the U.S. Navy master communications center at NAS San Diego.

Jefferies would tell people that the Enterprise was Starfleet's 17th starship design and that it was the first in the series hence the number '1701.'

When Jefferies saw Star Trek: The Motion Picture he fell asleep. He never watched subsequent incarnations of Trek, remarking that they had turned his Navy-esque bridge into "the lobby of the Hilton."[citation needed]

Within the Star Trek universe, Jefferies tubes and Captain Jefferies are named in his honor.

In June 2003, Jefferies was the guest of honor at the presentation of a documentary about him prepared for the special edition of the Star Trek: Generations DVD.

[edit] Worked on:

[edit] References

  1. ^ http://www.starshipdatalink.net/art/galileo.html

[edit] External links

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