So it’s been a while since the end of Series 3, and my millions of thoughts have started to percolate nicely. I have many, many! questions left unanswered, as we all do, but none more so than: what happened to Major Garland Briggs, and what was he doing for the last 25 years?

Way back in Series 2, we saw him being plucked from the woods by a still-unknown, cloaked figure whilst he was out fishing with the suspended-from-duty Agent Dale Cooper. He returned to Twin Peaks 3 days later, dressed in aviator gear more suited to the early 1900s. Seems pretty likely he’d travelled back in time. He couldn’t really remember what had happened during his ‘abduction’ and his wife Betty had said he’d disappeared several times before, but as his work was classified we’d never learn where he went or why.

betty and garland embrace

Garland later admitted to Coop and Harry that he was working on Project Blue Book, a government investigation into supernatural or extraterrestrial goings on, which had officially been disbanded years earlier. He learned that the government’s reasons for wanting this knowledge were not pure, and this weighed heavily on his conscience.

Major Briggs was a true and great man. As honest and pure of heart as you can get, and that is why he was chosen by The Fireman.

My feelings are that Briggs, maybe like Phillip Jeffries, and Doug Milford were chosen by The Fireman to play a role in preventing the destruction of our planet by evil. I also feel that Phillip Jeffries failed in his mission, got sucked in, maybe by greed or the lust for ‘the ring’. It’s maybe why he’s not sat comfortably inside The White Lodge, instead of trapped inside a slippery machine, manipulating time. Perhaps he cannot be trusted. The Fireman keeps many machines at his place. Maybe they are filled with the souls of past missionaries? Could it be a type of purgatory?

After Series 2 we knew not of Briggs fate, but the ‘Secret History of Twin Peaks‘ filled a huge void, and surpassed all expectations of just how important Briggs was to the story.

Briggs officially died in a fire at his station upon Blue Pine Mountain — Listening Post Alpha. The fire occurred shortly after he met with Agent Dale Cooper in his last days in Twin Peaks. It wasn’t the Good Dale, though; it was his Doppelgänger, aka Mr.C. Upon learning this, we all feared the worst — he had been murdered.

The SHOTP suggested otherwise, however, as Briggs was revealed to be The Archivist — the compiler of the dossier. He had collected historical artefacts and documents in an attempt to find the source of the demise of our planet. Jow Day, or as we call her, Judy. The Mother of all Evil.

Briggs must have travelled back and forth through time to collect these pieces of evidence, and he kept them to ensure his work would be passed on should anything happen to him. The SHOTP was not referred to in Series 3, but the message he left for Bobby, his son, in ‘This Is The Chair’ was like a capsule version of it. Proof enough on two small strips of paper that he knew what was coming, he knew his fate and embraced it.

message left in a capsule

Everything Briggs did was for a reason. Even to the point of taking his son to Jack Rabbit’s Palace as a child, making up stories, creating warm memories in his conscience that he’d reminisce about, knowing that those memories would one day play a huge part in solving the puzzle. Even naming it Jack Rabbits Palace was a clue. Odessa, where Carrie Page would be found, has the Jack Rabbit as its town symbol. He left clues with the people he trusted the most. His son Bobby, Hawk, Truman, and Cooper.

Indeed, Briggs even appeared to the Good Dale posthumously when he met Naido in the purple place. He told him that she was a Blue Rose. Dale may not have been able to process that information then, but he was taking it all in, and ultimately it saved Naido/Diane from eternal entrapment in a body unable to see or speak, to tell her truth, for Dale knew exactly who she was the second he laid eyes on her.

briggs head floats

Even Briggs’ body was a clue. I feel that Briggs sacrificed himself for the greater good after swallowing the wedding ring of Dougie Jones. Leaving one last clue for Gordon and his team to find the real Dale Cooper. He may well have been murdered by Mr. C or The Woodsmen — his head was never found, much like poor Bill Hastings, it may have been crushed and obliterated, but he knew this would happen, and he also knew that he’d continue to assist after his death. He waited, hiding in the dark of The Zone, quite probably The Dutchman’s, until he was found by Hastings and Davenport, and he enlisted their help, passing on one last message.

I’m still convinced, even though we didn’t see it happen, that the dossier would have been found at Davenport’s apartment. Perhaps in another timeline, if events had turned out differently. He left a trail for every eventuality. Briggs may have played this part-time and time again over the 25 years since his ‘death’. He may have been trying to find the perfect way to change events to stop Judy, learning more as he went along. Putting more and more clues in place for our heroes in the ‘real world’ to figure out.

When Briggs’ body was discovered in Ruth’s bed, we learned that his prints had been discovered at 16 different locations, probably crime scenes, in the years after his official death. He must’ve been manipulating events, fixing things. Are the ‘glitches’ we see in Series 3, such as the reflection of Big Ed drinking coffee out of sync, the customer switch at the RR, all hints of Briggs or another missionary changing history? Are timelines overlapping, deja vu?

Now that his body no longer exists, he had to pass the baton onto someone else — Agent Dale Cooper. Briggs ensured that Dale was released from the Black Lodge quickly after his own true human death, so that Dale could continue his work, trying to find and destroy Judy.

Dale took to his mission straight away, saved Laura from death, but maybe didn’t succeed in killing two birds with one stone. He’d either been tricked by Jeffries or MIKE and sent to the wrong date, or The Jumping Man, who scarpered from The Dutchman’s upon Coop’s arrival, may have tipped Judy off.

I feel that Coop was tricked, and he’s now opened up a can of worms. Carrie Page remembers her life as Laura, and she’s not going to be happy about it. How are they going to get out of that timeline? Thankfully, Briggs has left enough of a trail that they could be found.

Hawk has all the knowledge now. Just before Coop went off to save Laura in the moments before her murder, he said that things would change — he looked at Hawk, and he nodded back at him. Cooper once said, “Hawk, if I’m ever lost, I hope you’re the man they send to find me”. He knows about Jack Rabbit’s Palace, he knows Laura is The One, and he even has an inkling that something’s going on with Sarah Palmer. He also understands the living map and the Mother of All Evil. And we know that he ventured into the woods and saw the red curtains of the lodge at Glastonbury Grove. What happened that night that we don’t know about?

There’s also a reason why Briggs travelled back in time to visit the Nez Perce tribe. They understood the true power of the ring and why it should not be worn. I stick to my theory that the answer to the whole conundrum is that Laura should never take the ring. If Hawk knows that, too, then maybe good can triumph.

LMFAP with owl ring

As Milford passed on the mission to Briggs, Briggs has now passed it on to Cooper. Briggs remains with The Fireman, and his vision of Bobby’s future may still come to pass — the fact that he had it all should fill our hearts with the hope of better times to come, that the mission will be fulfilled in at least one version of the future.

Briggs is at peace now and on a higher plane. He takes his place in The White Lodge, a master of time travel, his soul pure. He has laid the foundations and completed his mission. A true hero of our times.

briggs in white lodge

3 responses to “Ground Control to Major Briggs”

  1. […] we can’t talk about evolving without mentioning Major Briggs. The details of Briggs’ role is murky at best as we have no POV from the man himself, but what we […]

  2. Michael Briggs avatar
    Michael Briggs

    Good piece. Only thing I’d add at the moment is regarding your comment that “Carrie Page remembers her life as Laura and she’s not going to be happy.” That’s true, of course. But she’s also already pretty unhappy, we’ll before traveling to the Palmer House, if we recall her life in Odessa, where she’s left behind a recent corpse in her “living” room. One theory of time travel suggests that no matter what you change prior to an event, somehow that event will still find a way to happen. A form of predestination. Of course, a popular counter theory is expressed in “Butterfly Effect,” where tiny alterations in the past ripple down the years to produce dramatically different presents.

  3. Functional Dougie avatar
    Functional Dougie

    Thanks for pointing out how Major Briggs’ behavior re: Jack Rabbit’s Palace betrays a degree of psychic acuity I hadn’t credited him with. I also really appreciate your linking up Hawk’s return to Glastonbury Grove in Season 3 with Cooper’s line about Hawk being sent to find him. Perhaps Hawk sent out a copy of himself to assist Cooper in the Black Lodge? He did say in Season 1 that he believes in multiple souls…

    There’s a few conclusions in this essay that I disagree with. I’d say the only one worth mentioning is the bit about Briggs’ head. Bill Hastings says that he saw Major Briggs’ head “disappear.” I conclude from this that Briggs willed a kind of lift-off: he’d completed his portion of the mission to save Cooper, so he ascended to become The Fireman’s messenger. There’s precedent for this in “Eraserhead,” where Henry’s head pops off in a similar fashion.

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