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When one looks in the box, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the cat.

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We now have a nice long story as background on the Potterverse North American wizarding school, Ilvermorny. But how does it all break down? Fans have been concerned about how this tale would unfold, following some upset over Rowling’s “History of Magic in North America” piece, but this is the first substantial glimpse we’ve been given into the more recent magical system in the United States and history of the school.

So let’s do this.

 

Here are the basics of the story:

The saga begins in the early 17th century, where a pureblood witch named Isolt Sayre (b. 1603) lives in County Kerry, Ireland with her family. Her parents are murdered, and she is spirited away by her aunt, one Gormlaith Gaunt. (Yup, that Gaunt family. The one that eventually leads to Voldemort.) It turns out that her aunt is the one responsible for the death of her parents, and is keen on raising her niece away from all Muggles and Mudbloods. Isolt hears her aunt’s stories about Hogwarts and desperately wishes to go, but is kept away due to Gormlaith’s fear of any kind of egalitarian influence. Eventually, Isolt steals her aunt’s wand (barred from having her own) and her mother’s old Gordian Knot brooch and flees. She disguises herself as a boy and gets on board the Mayflower, heading to the New World. Upon arriving in North America, she heads into the mountains, aware that her fellows passengers won’t take kindly to a witch in their midst.

In the forest, she saves the life of a Pukwudgie, a creature that “carries poison arrows” and generally dislikes humans. This particular one begrudgingly decides that he owes Isolt a life debt for the rescue (she cursed a Hidebehind that was trying to eat him), but won’t tell her his name–so Isolt takes to calling him William, after her father. The two form a strange friendship, and Isolt finds out about the other magical creatures in North America from him. She meets a Horned Serpent and feels strangely connected to it, and even fancies that she can hear it speak to her. Eventually, it tells her “Until I am a part of your family, your family is doomed.”

One day, Isolt and William come across a family–a mother, father, and their two sons–being attacked by the same Hidebehind. They dispatch the creature and Isolt discovers that the parents are dead, but their two boys are still alive, barely. William has no interest in helping them, but Isolt insists that if he aids her, she’ll consider his life debt repaid. When they get the boys back to her shelter, she tells William off, and he leaves. The boys, Chadwick and Webster Boot, turn out to be from a magical family, and Isolt nurses them back to health. Intending to bury Chadwick and Webster’s parents properly, Isolt heads back to the site of the attack, only to find that they have already been laid to rest by a young Muggle man named James Steward–he arrived from England on the same ship with the Boot family, and had gone looking for them, coming across their bodies instead. He notes the remnants of one of the parent’s wands and picks it up, causing it to backfire and knock him into a tree. He is unconscious, so Isolt decides to take him to her shelter as well. James is unavoidably exposed to magic as a result, but helps take care of the boys, and eventually builds Isolt a house on top of Mount Greylock. She names it Ilvermorny, after her old family home.

Isolt and James eventually marry and raise the Boot boys as their own sons. Isolt tells them stories about Hogwarts, and Chadwick and Webster are hypnotized by the notion. Isolt promises that once they each turn eleven, she will find them wands and they will start their own magic school. The boys decide it should be based off Hogwarts, leading to the idea of four houses (but Webster goes against the idea of names for houses, since he doesn’t believe a house called “Webster Boot” could ever win anything). They end up selecting local magical creatures for house names, and each pick one; Chadwick chooses the Thunderbird, Webster the Wampus, Isolt the Horned Serpent, and James the Pukwudgie (the only creature he had any real knowledge of from Isolt’s stories about William).

Before Chadwick’s eleventh birthday, Isolt has a dream where she shaves a piece of horn off the Horned Serpent. She wakes and heads down to the creek, finding the serpent ready and willing to fulfill the vision. On return, she asks James to fashion a piece of ash wood around it, giving Chadwick his promised wand. Webster eventually gets one as well. James and Isolt have their own children eventually–twin daughters named Martha and Rionach, after both of their mothers. Others begin to hear about the school and attend, though there are no boarders staying overnight. Native American wizards arrive to learn wand magic, and offer to teach their own techniques in exchange.

Gormlaith eventually tracks Isolt down when she hears of Ilvermorny school, and puts a powerful sleeping enchantment on Isolt and James in the night. Then she puts a deactivating spell on Isolt’s wand (which happens to be the wand of Salazar Slytherin himself), thinking to destroy their home and take their girls. But she doesn’t know about Chadwick and Webster, now 16 and 14, who leap to defend their family. Isolt and James eventually wake when they hear the cries of their twin girls, and Isolt rushes downstairs to help the boys fight off Gormlaith–only to find that her wand is useless. When Gormlaith has the whole family cornered, Isolt calls the name of her father in a panic, and William the Pukwudgie appears, hitting the aunt with one of his poison arrows and killing her. James is ecstatic to meet William and shakes his hand, telling him how glad he is to have named one of the Ilvermorny houses after him. With that, William decides to stay and brings other Pukwudgies on staff at the school, demanding a hefty sum of gold for their services as both security and maintenance.

Isolt buries Slytherin’s wand next to the school and a snakewood tree grows up in its place, one that cannot be pruned, but offers leaves with medicinal properties. As the school’s reputation grows, more students join. More teachers are hired, the cottage grows into a castle, and it eventually becomes a boarding school. Isolt and James are joint Headmasters who live to be well over 100, and the Boot boys thrive, one of them moving back to England. Their daughter Martha turns out to be a Squib and marries the brother of a friend from the Pocomtuc tribe. Rionach never marries, but teaches Defense Against the Dark Arts at the school. (The whole family is unaware that there are more Gaunts over in England.) There is always a Pukwudgie on staff named William who claims that he is not the original, but he leaves flowers by Isolt’s statue on her birthday every year.

 

Important school info:

  • The school robes are blue and cranberry. Blue for Isolt who always wished to attend Hogwarts and get Sorted into Ravenclaw, cranberry for James’s favorite pie.
  • The four houses are said to represent parts of the witch or wizard, as well as personality types. Horned Serpent is the Mind, which favors scholars; Wampus is the Body, which favors warriors; Pukwudgie is the Heart, which favors healers; Thunderbird is the Soul, which favors adventurers.
  • Sorting at Ilvermorny works as follows: the student stands on a Gordian Knot at the center of the opening chamber. Carvings of each house creature can be found on the wall, and they move if they select the student. If more than one house selects a student, then the student themselves gets to pick their house. About once a decade, all four houses pick the same student. (Seraphina Picquery, President of the Magical Congress of the United States of America from 1920-1928, was one such student, and chose Horned Serpent.)
  • Students receive their wands at school, after their sorting, due to very strict adherence to the Statute of Secrecy in the United States. They must leave their wands at school on vacations, and are only permitted to take them upon coming of age at seventeen.
  • The school has a reputation for being more democratic and non-elitist when compared to other wizarding schools across the globe.

 

Thoughts:

I was reticent about this whole thing, and really nervous about these additions to the world, and I… kinda love this. It works incredibly well with the world that Rowling already has in place, and adds some fascinating ideas to her mythos. Primarily: a descendent of Salazar Slytherin is responsible for the North American magic school.

Can. Can we just. Oof. Wow.

This is an incredibly important addition to this world, dismantling the idea of Slytherin, his house, and his affinity for serpents as immediate qualifiers for “badness.” Because that’s what the Potter books always communicated; Slytherin was a pureblood hate monger, Slytherin house was full of bad eggs who all turned to the Dark Arts, being a Parselmouth was evil, and having any kind of connection to snakes was clearly a bad thing.

And here is Isolt Sayre. A Slytherin descendent who marries a Muggle (sorry, No-Maj), whose affinity for snakes allows her adopted sons to practice magic, who refuses to adhere to the Gaunt family rhetoric, and establishes a school that has a reputation for being democratic. When we think of a generation of Slytherins who have the ability to move beyond the tiny box they are often placed in–this is it. It’s her. She’s the one. Granted, she wanted to be a Ravenclaw, but the potential for greatness in Slytherin house is right here. After all, Slytherin house is often defined by its ambition, and this woman wanted to attend Hogwarts so bad that she literally created her own and turned it into one of the greatest wizarding schools in the world. It doesn’t really get much more ambitious than that.

It means something that the founders of the North American school are essentially a found family. Four people who might never have met and formed this unit once unseen circumstances threw them all together. And one of the founders is a Muggle. Imagine what that means to the Muggleborn students, to know that one of the original headmasters of the school couldn’t do a bit of magic. What a comfort that must be, and how welcoming.

The idea of the school being founded as this small family project and just growing is so effective, and prevents a lot of awfulness that could have resulted if the school had been this grand establishing imperialistic move on the part of new settlers. Instead, we have a center for learning where magic-users who never learned with wands are able to form an exchange of sorts. (This is also similar to the true arc of U.S. history, though often the exchanges between North America’s native population and European settlers were unbalanced in terms of what each side gained.) The school embraced every form of magical learning to broaden its scope, and is likely better for it, having become an organized institution after years of DIY teaching. More choices are placed in student hands as well, right from the sorting, with the ability to choose if you’re selected by more than one house.

Given U.S. history, it makes perfect sense that the school is modeled in part on Hogwarts; the United States has always leaned heavily on certain aspects of its British foundations, both cultures in perpetual conversation with one another even to this day. The given backstory makes this a logical root for Ilvermorny, but perhaps it is even more logical to find the places where the school diverges, as American sensibility often dictates a certain desire to distinguish oneself through “uniqueness,” i.e. choice.

Rowling makes a point of explaining that the Pukwudgies are a distant ancestor of goblins, and there are a few similarities they share in temperament and philosophy, including their lack of concern–or outright hostility–towards human affairs. But this means that, as opposed to Hogwarts, Ilvermorny employs a magical workforce that is paid and came to the school voluntarily, which is heartening to say the least.

In terms of her real world resources, all of the magical creatures that Rowling references are part of Native American mythology, and Mount Greylock is a real mountain in Adams, Massachusetts. Isolt’s ancestor Morrigan is also a well known figure in Irish mythology. Isolt’s own name is likely a reference to Iseult (or Isolde) of Arthurian legend. And the Boot boys do have at least one likely descendent that we see at Hogwarts during Harry’s time: Terry Boot, Ravenclaw and member of Dumbledore’s Army.

All of Rowling’s themes are alive and well in this story, including the benefit of corporation and understanding, and of course, love being the most potent force in the world–Isolt and James only wake from Gormlaith’s sleeping curse at the sound of their daughters’ crying, as the curse “like Gormlaith herself, took no account of the power of love.” Also, we get the Potterverse’s usual trademark sense of humor; Isolt picks one of the school colors because she always wanted to be a Ravenclaw, but James’s color pick is due to his love of cranberry pie.

REPEAT: ONE OF THE SCHOOL COLORS IS PIE. (Is this the part where I start chanting “U.S.A.!” obnoxiously? It feels like that part.) <33333

There is still plenty of room for fans to theorize and flesh out this area of the wizarding world, but this is a fascinating place to start. We have to assume that some of this information will serve as useful background for the upcoming film (at the very least, it seems likely that we’ll meet President Seraphina Picquery given the time frame). But that still offers endless possibilities: will we get to see the school? How much of it? How about that special Slytherin tree with medicinal properties? Will we get to meet William? And what’s it like for No-Majs in this society, one where the primary school on the continent had a respected No-Maj founder?

We can only guess, but this is an intriguing start to a brand new side of Rowling’s world.

Emmet Asher-Perrin is now weirdly proud to have been sorted into Horned Serpent on Pottermore. You can bug her on Twitter and Tumblr, and read more of her work here and elsewhere.

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Emmet Asher-Perrin

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Emmet Asher-Perrin is the News & Entertainment Editor of Reactor. Their words can also be perused in tomes like Queers Dig Time Lords, Lost Transmissions: The Secret History of Science Fiction and Fantasy, and Uneven Futures: Strategies for Community Survival from Speculative Fiction. They cannot ride a bike or bend their wrists. You can find them on Bluesky and other social media platforms where they are mostly quiet because they'd rather to you talk face-to-face.
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