Subject: Oh stars, I just realised:
Author:
Posted on: 2016-07-01 23:49:00 UTC

-In 1790, the border of the US was approximately the Mississippi.

-The other side of the river was nominally French or Spanish, but in practice was inhabited by Native Americans.

-MACUSA's History claims that Native Americans were particularly skilled with plants and animals.

-Plants and (magical) animals are exactly what you use to make wands.

-I know how they stopped wandlore spreading in the USA: "Oh, you want to play with twigs and Wampus hair? Like one of those savages out west? You know they don't even follow Rappaport's Law over the river. Things will be so much better when MACUSA's authority extends from sea to shining sea... oh, sorry, what was that? You're still going on about wanting to muck about with primitive magic like the Indians do...?"

The "plants and animals" thing was a cunningly-designed racial insult designed to instil the wizards of MACUSA's hegemony with an unconscious bias against wandmaking as a trade.

As to how they treated the Native wandmakers out west, when the US and MACUSA spread that way? Well... none of the four 1920's wandmakers came from much west of the Mississippi. Draw your own conclusions.

hS

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