Here's where every major 'Outlander' character ended up in the season 7 finale
- Warning: Spoilers ahead for the season seven finale of Starz's "Outlander."
- The season finale of the time-traveling romance drama delivered plenty of twists and turns.
- Here's a recap of where Jamie, Claire, and the rest of the characters ended up.
The season seven finale of the time-traveling romance drama "Outlander" aired on Friday.
Here's where all of the major characters ended up.
The second half of season seven delivered some truly shocking twists for our favorite time traveler.
Claire (Caitríona Balfe) was confronted with the news that Jamie (Sam Heughan) had died while crossing the Atlantic Ocean, leaving her widowed.
She then hastily married Lord John Grey (David Berry) as a means to stop the English army from arresting and executing her for spying on behalf of the rebels.
It was only after Claire and Lord John consummated their marriage that she learned that Jamie had survived his voyage to America.
As the Revolutionary War continued to wage on around them, Claire found herself at the center of the Battle of Monmouth, where she was critically injured by a stray bullet.
At the close of season seven, Claire had made a full recovery but found herself confronted with something she had previously believed impossible: her and Jamie's first child, a daughter named Faith, had not died in childbirth over 30 years before.
Jamie finally returned to his native home in the second half of season seven after many years away.
The reunion with Jamie's sister Jenny (Kristin Atherton) and other members of the Fraser family was cut short when Claire was summoned to Philadelphia to help an ailing member of the Grey family.
Once back on American soil, Jamie found himself called upon by none other than George Washington, who promoted him to brigadier general in the Continental Army.
However, when Claire's life was put on the line, Jamie severed ties with the army, writing his resignation in blood on the back of a shirtless messenger.
Brianna's family was torn apart in the second half of "Outlander" season seven thanks to the meddling of her new adversary, Rob Cameron (Chris Fulton).
After being led to believe that Rob had taken her son Jemmy (Matthew Adair) through the stones at Craigh na Dun, Roger (Richard Rankin) followed, leaving Brianna and her youngest child, Mandy (Rosa Morris), to fend for themselves in the 20th century.
Brianna eventually found that Rob had not taken Jemmy to another time period but was holding him hostage in the present day. Thanks to Mandy's psychic-like connection to Jemmy, they eventually found that he'd been taken to a tunnel under Loch Errochty.
After that, Brianna and the two youngsters went through the standing stones at Craigh na Dun themselves, determined to find Roger in the past.
They did so, and Brianna was able to have another sweet family reunion as well, meeting her grandfather, Brian Fraser (Andrew Whipp).
Roger spent all of the second half of "Outlander" season seven in 1739 after he wound up there while looking for his son.
He and Buck MacKenzie (Diarmaid Murtagh), who also made the trip back, encountered several key characters while there, including a younger version of Buck's parents, Geillis Duncan (Lotte Verbeek) and Dougal MacKenzie (Graham MacTavish).
Roger also came across his own father, Jerry MacKenzie (Nicholas Ralph), whom they discovered had also accidentally traveled to the past while fighting in World War Two. While Jerry wasn't aware of who Roger was, the two shared a sweet moment before Roger sent him back to his own timeline.
By the end of the season, Roger had reunited with his family after they found him at the family's ancestral home of Lallybroch.
Young Ian (John Bell) began the second half of season seven in Scotland, where he reunited with his father (Steven Cree), who was dying of consumption.
Following that, Ian returned to America to be with Rachel Hunter (Izzy Meikle-Small), and the two married in a Quaker ceremony.
In the season finale, Ian received both good and bad news; firstly, he learned that Rachel was pregnant. Not long after, though, he woke up to find that his beloved dog Rollo died of old age in the night.
When his marriage to Claire was annulled following Jamie's return from the dead, Lord John Grey found his life on the line.
After Jamie pretended to take John hostage in a nearby forest to get a group of British soldiers off his tail, the two men came to blows when Jamie learned how close John had gotten to Claire in his absence.
A group of rebel soldiers who happened upon the sparring duo took Lord John away as their own prisoner.
John managed to escape and was later found by a Continental soldier who set him free.
Shaken by the realization that Jamie was his father, William attempted to take his mind off of the truth about his parentage by visiting a brothel.
While there, he met Jane Pocock (Silvia Presente), a sex worker with whom he forged a friendship.
William paid to spend a night with Jane in order to save her from the lecherous Captain Harkness (Adam Jackson-Smith).
Later on in the season, Jane and her younger sister Fanny (Florrie May Wilkinson) sought out William at the British Army encampment outside of Philadelphia after they fled the brothel.
As Jane explained, Captain Harkness had paid a large sum to take Fanny's virginity. Jane had then done what she thought she had to do to save her sister and killed Captain Harkness.
After Jane was arrested for the crime, William enlisted his father's help to try to rescue her.
Jane's time on the show is brief but important.
After initially meeting William at a brothel, Jane crossed paths with him again after she killed a high-ranking British soldier. William agreed to help her and her sister escape to New York.
Before William was able to get them out of Philadelphia safely, Jane was arrested and sentenced to death.
While being held prisoner, William and Jamie ambushed the soldiers guarding her. They burst in to save her, but it was too late. Accepting her fate, Jane had already taken her own life.
This left Fanny without a guardian. With no one else to turn to, William asked Claire and Jamie to take the youngster in, leading to the discovery that Jane and Fanny's mother may have been the couple's presumed-dead daughter, Faith.
In the last moments of the finale, Claire came across Fanny singing a song that she had sweetly sung to her daughter as a baby — a song that no one else, except a time traveler like Claire, would know since it hadn't been written by that point in history.