Torchwood Three



Torchwood 3, otherwise known as the Hub is the branch of Torchwood that operates out of Cardiff, Wales. It was created mainly to monitor the Cardiff Rift. Over more than a hundred years, Captain Jack Harkness has had a close association with Torchwood 3; he has been its leader since 1999. Though Torchwood 3 was significantly smaller than the London branch, with only a handful of employees, after Torchwood 1 was destroyed in the Battle of Canary Wharf, it became the largest surviving branch of the organisation. (Torchwood 2 is a single operative in Glasgow.)

Even before the Battle of Canary Wharf, Torchwood 3 had severed ties with the rest of the organisation and had become largely autonomous. Captain Jack, who did not share the organisation's low opinion of the Doctor, had by that time vowed to continue Torchwood as the kind of organisation which would have made the Doctor proud.

Mission profile and operations
Like all Torchwood branches, the Cardiff branch has a mission of protecting Great Britain from alien threats. The founding of the Cardiff branch seems to have been mainly motivated by the existence of the Cardiff rift, which is responsible for turning the region into a hotbed of alien activity, and is also is a steady source of valuable alien artefacts that the team scavenges and attempts to reverse-engineer. Apart from the occasional world-threatening crisis, Torchwood also has a number of day-to-day projects and tasks to work on, as well as recurring problems.

Rift monitoring and control
The constant inflow of "flotsam and jetsam" from the rift poses many opportunities for the intrepid team, but also a constant danger. Recognising this, Torchwood had by 1913 started to build a Rift Manipulator to better control rift activity. By the 21st century, it was also capable of monitoring rift activity in detail, so that the Torchwood staff was able to predict when and where the danger might strike next.

Weevil containment
Weevils are a race of humanoid-aliens, which frequently turn up in Cardiff thanks to the Rift. They were first documented by Torchwood in the 1950s; by the 21st century, a population of hundreds existed in the sewers. Though Weevils will usually keep to the sewers, avoiding human contact, occasionally one will develop a taste for human flesh or otherwise become a nuisance. Weevil control is one of Torchwood's major day-to-day operations, and, at any time several Weevils are found in storage cells in the lower level of the Hub. For the purpose of catching Weevils Torchwood 3 has also developed an anti-Weevil spray. (TW: Everything Changes

Caring for rift returnees
While it is obvious that the Rift deposits objects, until 2008 it was unknown to even some of its own employees that the rift also takes things, in an event known as a negative rift spike. Some humans taken by the rift were eventually returned to earth, but they were ravaged from falling trough the rift and incapable of being reintegrated in Earth society.

Until the year 2000 these returnees were just locked away in the vaults or cryogenically frozen, and ultimately forgotten. When Captain Jack assumed command of Torchwood, he found two such returnees in the vaults and decided these people should be looked after. He set up a remote facility on the island of Flat Holm, telling its employees that the people he left in their care were the result of failed experiments. Over the years more returnees were found, and in 2008 the rate at which people returned increased, "as if the rift is trying to correct its mistakes". By the end of the year the number of people cared for at the facility had reached 17.

Reverse-engineering technology
True to the Torchwood motto "If it's alien, it's ours", Torchwood 3 has through the years collected and reverse-engineered an impressive amount of alien technology, and studying alien artifacts remains central to their operation. Much of the technology they possess finds use in the day-to-day operations of Torchwood. For example, Torchwood has possessed and operated advanced cryogenic technology since at least the 1910s, and in first decade of the 21st century was capable of utilising alien computer technology to "scan" all available information sources for information. Around the turn of the 21st century, the team began experimenting with a Resurrection gauntlet, for questioning deceased crime victims, and a Singularity Scalpel, to easily remove inoperable alien organisms from humans. Other key technologies are Portable prison cells and Retcon, a powerful amnesia inducer.

Keeping a low profile
Torchwood must keep not only itself but also the very existence of aliens from the public. Though greatly facilitated by the human tendency to just ignore everything that was too much out of the ordinary, keeping the secret is still no easy job. Torchwood under Jack Harkness' leadership prefers a more diplomatic approach--contacting clueless spaceship pilots and telling them that they were "spooking the locals" (TW: Cyberwoman), for example, instead of simply destroying them--but the perception of Torchwood as a clumsy and overly trigger-happy organisation persists.

Still, many Cardiff residents, even laymen, seemed to be more or less aware of all the strange things that kept happening, again and again, though often they weren't at all impressed. (TW: Kiss Kiss, Bang Bang and others, possibly also due to recent events i.e. DW: The Runaway Bride and Army of Ghosts). Many police officers were aware, and quite frustrated, with what they often saw as a "regular" secret ops unit disturbing their operations or taking them over entirely. Under the command of Jack Harkness the team had developed a very relaxed approach to secrecy, ordering pizzas to their top secret underground lair and having a tendency to stamp large Torchwood logos on their field equipment. (TW: Everything Changes)

Other tasks
Torchwood is also responsible for monitoring other potential sources of otherworldly trouble in the vicinity of Cardiff. They monitor the local trade in alien artifacts (such as Dogon sixth eyes (TW:Random Shoes)) and locals known to be involved in aliens or alien artifacts (such as collector Henry Parker, whom they had labeled "mostly harmless").

Human resources
Under the leadership of Jack Harkness, Torchwood 3 personnel are encouraged to treat their work as a job, not an obsession, with Jack often seen encouraging his colleagues to go home and rest. Maintaining personal relationships outside of the Torchwood team is not discouraged (as long as secrecy is maintained) but has proven difficult, with most Torchwood members turning to fellow team members for companionship (i.e. Jack and Ianto, Owen and Tosh). An exception to this is Gwen Cooper, who maintained a relationship with her boyfriend and later fiance Rhys Williams, although ultimately Rhys was made aware of Torchwood's existence.

It is not known if this is a blanket rule for Torchwood teams, or only specific to Torchwood 3, but certain protocols are in place should a team member die of any cause. His or her body is to be stored permanently (possibly for future study), and his or her worldly possessions are to be confiscated by Torchwood and held in storage permanently. (TW: Everything Changes, They Keep Killing Suzie)

It is possible for Torchwood members to resign, with the understanding that they will be required to take a retcon pill to forget their involvement with the team. (TW: End of Days)

19th century
Torchwood operated in Cardiff from 1885 onwards. (TW: Slow Decay) Following the death of a male operative (torchwood.org.uk), Emily Holroyd recruited Alice Guppy in 1897. The Torchwood HQ in Cardiff at that time consisted of little more than a few rooms and a holding cell. They had a policy of executing hostile aliens immediately, as they had no way of returning them home. Over a period of more than a year, the pair monitored Jack Harkness, who made mention of 'the Doctor'. As the Torchwood Institute was founded largely to combat the Doctor (DW:Tooth and Claw), the two women captured Jack, discovered his ability to return from the dead and then recruited him. Not long after, Torchwood would begin to physically expand into the underground and to build the Hub. (TW: Fragments)

20th century
By 1913 work on a Rift Manipulator had started, in the hopes of minimising the constant danger posed by the rift. During 1913, the Institute noticed increased Rift activity, and considered this more justification to commence work on the Manipulator. The increased activity came from "foreshocks" of the use of the Manipulator itself, traveling backwards in time from the widening of the Rift, causing the fracture of the Rift in the early 21st century. Ironically, the Manipulator itself (in the future) had caused the widening of the Rift.

In 1918 Torchwood 3, under the command of Gerald Carter, already had access to sophisticated cryogenic suspension technology. Gerald Carter and another operative, Harriet Derbyshire investigated supposed hauntings (in fact time shifts from the future) at St Teilo's Military Hospital. Derbyshire shortly afterwards died in action in an unrelated case. (TW: To the Last Man)


 * For unknown reasons, Jack Harkness didn't pose for the group portrait taken of the team at this time.

21st century
On New Year's Eve 1999, Torchwood operative (and possibly the team leader) Alex Hopkins killed his entire team, bar the immortal Jack Harkness. He claimed that he was killing them to "protect" them from the 21st century. Alex made the grim joke that he had given Jack command and then committed suicide. Jack Harkness was left with the job of recruiting a new team and leading it. (TW: Fragments)

Shortly thereafter, Harkness discovered two Humans whom the rift had returned and had been locked away in the Hub's cells, since Torchwood had deemed them unable to reintegrate into society. He founded a facility on the island of Flat Holm to care for them and others who were later returned. Subsequently, he chose not to inform certain members of his staff. (TW: Adrift) In the 2000s he recruited civilians Toshiko Sato and then Owen Harper in an attempt to reform Torchwood into a more humane organisation, inspired by his admiration of the Doctor. He also employed Suzie Costello. He also, with much persuasion at first, took in Ianto Jones, a survivor of the Battle of Canary Wharf who had worked for Torchwood 1. (TW: Fragments)

During her first years at Torchwood, Toshiko Sato developed Rift equations, which were to be used as guidelines to more safely operate the Rift Manipulator. (TW: Captain Jack Harkness)

2007 was an eventful year for Torchwood 3. Agent Suzie Costello committed a series of murders with an alien artefact, the Life Knife, in order to test out the Resurrection Gauntlet. She committed suicide when her activities were discovered. Jack took in Gwen Cooper, a Cardiff Police Constable who had helped him to solve the case. (TW: Everything Changes) As well as internal distrust, at times, of Jack himself, Torchwood 3 subsequently braved an attack by Lisa Hallett, a partially converted Cyberman who had survived their defeat at Torchwood 1. (TW: Cyberwoman)

Tosh had meanwhile begun to experiment with using the Rift manipulator. With Tosh and Jack transported to 1941 Cardiff, Owen and Ianto, out of desperation, used the manipulator and Tosh's Rift equations to return them. (TW: Captain Jack Harkness) This would have wide-ranging consequences, as the use of the Manipulator caused the Rift to splinter and cause temporal shifts to occur all over Earth and Cardiff itself. The team revolted against Jack and shot and killed him and the ancient demon Abaddon was released from the Rift, briefly causing havoc in central Cardiff before Jack defeated him. (TW: End of Days)

Directly after this incident, Jack suddenly and without warning left Torchwood, when the Doctor came to refuel at the rift and Jack chased him off-world. (TW: End of Days, DW: Utopia)

During his absence the team learned to work more independently, though they were unable to help with the takeover of the world by the Master, as he had sent them on a wild goose chase off to the Himalayas. (DW: The Sound of Drums). Jack returned some months later, finding that Gwen had taken over as team leader in the meantime. (TW: Kiss Kiss, Bang Bang)

Also around 2009, the Rift started returning more and more humans who had previously been taken away in negative rift spikes. In the words of Jack Harkness, "it is almost as if the rift is trying to correct its mistakes". Victims continued to be transferred to the Flat Holm facility. (TW: Adrift). Another trend in recent years is an increase in Weevil activity.

Other notable events in 2009 were Torchwood 3 stopping a Weevil fighting ring (TW: Combat) uncovering an alien sleeper cell (TW: Sleeper), unilaterally closing down an official research facility (TW: Reset) and stopping a powerful being, a personification  of Death (TW: Dead Man Walking)

In early 2009 UNIT medical officer Dr Martha Jones came in briefly in order to provide support. (TW: Reset). Very shortly after her arival, Torchwood doctor Owen Harper died (TW: Reset) and came back to partial life via another Resurrection Gauntlet. (TW: Dead Man Walking). This lead to Doctor Jones staying with Torchwood somewhat longer than anticipated. Torchwood 3 later lost two members of the team in 2009, Owen Harper was trapped in a nuclear meltdown that decomposed his already dead body and Toshiko Sato died of a shot to the stomach. (TW: Exit Wounds).

In 2009, Torchwood Three is called upon by former Prime Minister Harriet Jones via subwave network along with Sarah Jane Smith and Martha Jones in an effort to contact the Doctor after Earth is transported into the Medusa Cascade by Davros, during the Dalek Invasion of 2009. Jack, Gwen and Ianto use the Rift Manipulator in conjunction with Sarah Jane's supercomputer Mr Smith to amplify the signal of Martha's superphone to break the signal barrier and reach the Doctor. Jack leaves the team behind to assist the Doctor, and Gwen and Ianto are saved from Dalek extermination by the time-lock invented by Tosh before she died. The two are later called upon by the Doctor himself to assist his TARDIS via Rift Manipulator in its attempts to carry the Earth back to its regular orbit. {DW: The Stolen Earth/Journey's End)

The Hub
The Hub was the main base of affairs for Torchwood 3, analogous to Torchwood 1's Torchwood Tower and Torchwood 2's office in Glasgow. The Hub is located directly under Roald Dahl Plass in central Cardiff, also the location of the Cardiff rift. The Hub was connected to the rest of the Torchwood Institute via organic computer.

Incomplete list of features

 * Invisible lift. This lift leads directly from the hub to Roald Dahl Plass above. Torchwood personnel can enter or leave without arousing suspicion, since the exit is still suffering the effects of the chameleon circuit of a TARDIS that once stood above it.
 * An exit disguised as a tourist office.
 * Jack Harkness's office.
 * Main hall (including workstations and entrances to other Hub features)
 * Cryo-chambers. Bodies of deceased Torchwood employees as well as aliens & anomalous humans can be stored here.
 * Conference room
 * Safe containing various alien artefacts
 * Autopsy room.
 * Interrogation room
 * Holding cells. (Mainly used to hold captured Weevils.)
 * A firing range.
 * Deep-sea tank (a large water tank deep in the Hub which allows deep-sea animals to survive)
 * Rest & Recreation room (mentioned in Another Life
 * Jack Harkness' sleeping area. A bed located beneath a manhole cover.

Current

 * Jack Harkness, (Joined 1899; current leader)
 * Ianto Jones, (General support)
 * Gwen Cooper, (Field operative; temporary leader)

Former

 * Emily Holroyd (Active circa 1899)
 * Alice Guppy (Active circa 1899-1901)
 * Charles Gaskell (Active circa 1901)
 * Gerald Carter (Leader circa 1918)
 * Harriet Derbyshire (Physicist; died circa 1919)
 * Douglas Caldwell (Active circa 1918)
 * Lydia Childs (Active circa 1918)
 * Charles Quinn (Active circa 1918)
 * Alex Hopkins (Died New Year's Eve 1999)
 * Suzie Costello (Died, twice, circa 2007)
 * Owen Harper (Died, twice, in 2009)
 * Toshiko Sato (Died in 2009)
 * Martha Jones (Temporary medical officer, 2009)