Subject: Hickory
Author:
Posted on: 2016-03-09 18:22:00 UTC
Given that all wand woods have distinct properties, what do you think hickory's properties would be?
Subject: Hickory
Author:
Posted on: 2016-03-09 18:22:00 UTC
Given that all wand woods have distinct properties, what do you think hickory's properties would be?
As before, I own nothing.
17th Century and beyond
As No-Maj Europeans began to emigrate to the New World, more witches and wizards of European origin also came to settle in America. Like their No-Maj counterparts, they had a variety of reasons for leaving their countries of origin. Some were driven by a sense of adventure, but most were running away: sometimes from persecution by No-Majs, sometimes from a fellow witch or wizard, but also from the wizarding authorities. The latter sought to blend in among the increasing tide of No-Majs, or hide among the Native American wizarding population, who were generally welcoming and protective of their European brethren.
From the first, however, it was clear that the New World was to be a harsher environment for witches and wizards than the Old World. There were three main reasons for this.
Firstly, like their No-Maj counterparts, they had come to a country with few amenities, except those they made themselves. Back home, they had only to visit the local Apothecary to find the necessities for potions: here, they had to forage among unfamiliar magical plants. There were no established wandmakers, and Ilvermorny School of Witchcraft and Wizardry, which would one day rank among the greatest magical establishments in the world, was at that time no more than a rough shack containing two teachers and two students.
Secondly, the actions of their fellow No-Majs made the non-magical population of most wizards’ homelands look lovable. Not only had conflict developed between the immigrants and the Native American population, which struck a blow at the unity of the magical community, their religious beliefs made them deeply intolerant of any trace of magic. The Puritans were happy to accuse each other of occult activity on the slenderest evidence, and New World witches and wizards were right to be extremely wary of them.
The last, and probably the most dangerous problem encountered by wizards newly arrived in North America were the Scourers. As the wizarding community in America was small, scattered and secretive, it had as yet no law enforcement mechanism of its own. This left a vacuum that was filled by an unscrupulous band of wizarding mercenaries of many foreign nationalities, who formed a much-feared and brutal taskforce committed to hunting down not only known criminals, but anyone who might be worth some gold. As time went on, the Scourers became increasingly corrupt. Far away from the jurisdiction of their native magical governments, many indulged a love of authority and cruelty unjustified by their mission. Such Scourers enjoyed bloodshed and torture, and even went so far as trafficking their fellow wizards. The numbers of Scourers multiplied across America in the late seventeenth century and there is evidence that they were not above passing off innocent No-Majs as wizards, to collect rewards from gullible non-magic members of the community.
The famous Salem Witch Trials of 1692-93 were a tragedy for the wizarding community. Wizarding historians agree that among the so-called Puritan judges were at least two known Scourers, who were paying off feuds that had developed while in America. A number of the dead were indeed witches, though utterly innocent of the crimes for which they had been arrested. Others were merely No-Majs who had the misfortune to be caught up in the general hysteria and bloodlust.
Salem was significant within the magical community for reasons far beyond the tragic loss of life. Its immediate effect was to cause many witches and wizards to flee America, and many more to decide against locating there. This led to interesting variations in the magical population of North America, compared to the populations of Europe, Asia and Africa. Up until the early decades of the twentieth century, there were fewer witches and wizards in the general American population than on the other four continents. Pure-blood families, who were well-informed through wizarding newspapers about the activities of both Puritans and Scourers, rarely left for America. This meant a far higher percentage of No-Maj-born witches and wizards in the New World than elsewhere. While these witches and wizards often went on to marry and found their own all-magical families, the pure-blood ideology that has dogged much of Europe’s magical history has gained far less traction in America.
Perhaps the most significant effect of Salem was the creation of the Magical Congress of the United States of America in 1693, pre-dating the No-Maj version by around a century. Known to all American witches and wizards by the abbreviation MACUSA (commonly pronounced as: Mah – cooz – ah), it was the first time that the North American wizarding community came together to create laws for themselves, effectively establishing a magical-world-within-a-No-Maj-world such as existed in most other countries. MACUSA’s first task was to put on trial the Scourers who had betrayed their own kind. Those convicted of murder, of wizard-trafficking, torture and all other manners of cruelty were executed for their crimes.
Several of the most notorious Scourers eluded justice. With international warrants out for their arrest, they vanished permanently into the No-Maj community. Some of them married No-Majs and founded families where magical children appear to have been winnowed out in favour of non-magical offspring, to maintain the Scourer’s cover. The vengeful Scourers, cast out from their people, passed on to their descendants an absolute conviction that magic was real, and the belief that witches and wizards ought to be exterminated wherever they were found.
American magical historian Theophilus Abbot has identified several such families, each with a deep belief in magic and a great hatred of it. It may be partly due to the anti-magic beliefs and activities of the descendants of Scourer families that North American No-Majs often seem harder to fool and hoodwink on the subject of magic than many other populations. This has had far-reaching repercussions on the way the American wizarding community is governed.
-Ilvermorny dates to somewhere in the early 1600s, but started off small. Still no indication of where exactly it is, or where it got the name. It seems that it was not a native institution, though, so the name is probably from a European language.
-The question 'how did real magic users get caught up in witch trials?' is answered with 'magical witchcatchers'. Fairly logical, that.
-The New World magical community seems to have cut itself off from the Old. Whereas before the Natives were in vague contact with Europe and Africa, now the running-from-authority Euromericans may have damped down on that communication.
-Magical plants are different in the New World. That means different potions, and probably (once they got round to it) different woods for wands.
-There are few to no Pureblood families in the Americas, and so no racism around that. That's really interesting, given the vast historical problem the US has with the other sort of racism. I guess JKR was correlating Purebloods with the aristocracy here? Speculation: skin-colour racism was alive and well in the American magical community, probably justified as 'African wizards should just Apparate back to Africa where they belong'.
-MACUSA has changed its name at least once. In the 1690s, it would have been 'United Colonies' if anything, but probably just 'North American Colonies'. The term 'u/United States' is a political coinage from much later. I'm dubious about 'Congress', too - the term seems to have originally meant a single meeting, not an ongoing thing. I'd imagine they changed from ??Magical Parliament of the North American Colonies to MACUSA during the War of Independence.
-Americans are harder to trick about magic than Europeans. This sort of feels like it might be a snide comment on something, but I have no idea what.
hS
-There are few to no Pureblood families in the Americas, and so no racism around that. That's really interesting, given the vast historical problem the US has with the other sort of racism.
In America, "pureblood" is essentially, I would say, replaced by the ability to somehow trace one's geneology back to the "First Settlers." New England is rife with this practice, and it creeps in everywhere else with organizations like "Daughters of the Pioneers" and "Daughters of the Confederacy."
Also, I have thought for a long time that in the US, it really would have made sense to change the races of the main characters up, precisely because the class system, though it is noticeably more preset in some regions than others, is way, way, way down the line from racism in "structural problems in society."
Americans being harder to trick about magic has some degree of sense. Early American Settlers were convinced that magic was real. That is precisely one of the reasons that the Salem Witch Trials took off like they dead. Early Americans were convinced Magic was just outside their gates, they believed that the devil was hunting them.
So that can make some degree of sense.
1) I'm gonna guess that Ilvermorny is going to be the final big reveal that conculdes this entire thing. Two more texts to go, Thursday and Friday.
2) I'm not that surprised about plants, honestly. There are countless plants native to America: hawthorn, basswood, wintergreen, horsemint, jewelweed, etc. Also, if I had to guess, I'd say the most popular wand wood would be hickory.
Thing is, mostly what we've got here are varieties of the same sorts of trees found in Europe: oak, ash, elm, pine, birch, maple, willow, etc. I reckon sugar maple and aspen would be big ones.
I'd love to see a mangrove wand, though. Or tamarack—they're a kind of larch, but I really love tamaracks. Maybe sassafras? Oh, and let's not forget the American hornbeam.
Here's an interesting page that might shed some light on the subject.
~Neshomeh
That might make an interesting wand or Lignum Vitae. That could be interesting as well.
*screams and curls up in a ball sobbing*
Here, have a plushie Fluffy. *hands the three-headed dog mascot* He'll protect you.
I wanna see some Melungeons with flowering dogwood wands. One does have to wonder whether or not the Deep South is more or less safe for the magically-inclined...
Given that all wand woods have distinct properties, what do you think hickory's properties would be?
'Magical Parliament of the North American Colonies' or MAPANAC