A Guide To American Wandlore

By JamesPascatore

24.1K 185 10

In this world, there are many tools one may use to direct magic. One of the most well known of these is the w... More

Introduction
American Wand Cores Part 1
American Wand Cores Part 2
Famous American Wandmakers
Shikoba Wolfe
Violetta Beauvais
Wand Flexibility
Regional Wandlore Part 1 - North America
American Chestnut
Bald Cypress
Bristlecone Pine
Catalina Island Mountain Mahogany
Foxtail Pine
Franklinia
Gopherwood
Joshua Tree
Koa
Manchineel
Palm
Sequoia
Torrey Pine
White Elm
American Oak
Southern Magnolia
Sassafras
Southern Yellow Pine
White Oak
Western Hemlock
Dogwood
Pacific Madrone
Western Red Cedar
Black Walnut
American Larch (Tamarack)
Ohio Buckeye
Claro Walnut
Eastern Red Cedar
Macadamia
Hickory
Mesquite
Swamp Mayhaw
Mahogany
Mountain Laurel
Prickly Ash
Juniper
Cottonwood
Rosewood
Citrus
Purpleheart
Blue Spruce
Pecan
Red Maple
Northern White Cedar
Blue Palo Verde
Rhododendron
Hornbeam
Holly
Peach
Black Locust
Hawthorn
Ponderosa Pine
Cherry in the United States
Gray Pine
Yellow Poplar
Sugar Maple
Mangrove
Honey Locust
Redwood
Jimson Weed
Wisteria
Candlenut Tree
American Beech
Sweetgum
Apple
Western White Pine
Gingko
Pistachio
Eucalyptus
Quaking Aspen
Birch
Osage Orange
Douglas Fir
Manzanita
Pear
American Sycamore aka Buttonwood
Alder
American Mulberry
Red Spruce
Baobab
Sitka Spruce
Loblolly Pine
Pinyon Pine
Eastern Redbud
Plum
Camphor Tree
Longleaf Pine
Pacific Yew
Persimmon
Tanoak
Basswood
Olive
Slash Pine
Avocado
Spanish Elm
Black Ironwood
Texas Mulberry
Arizona Walnut
Mexican Juniper
White Sapote
Montezuma Cypress
Lignum vitae
Balsam Fir
Kaya
Yucca
Lodgepole Pine
Date Palm
Texas Madrone
Gumbo Limbo
Coconut
Jacaranda
Pomegranate
Monkey Puzzle Tree
Pohutukawa aka New Zealand Christmas Tree
Brazilian Walnut aka Ipê
Quebracho
Nandubay
Algarrobo Negro
Palo Santo
Aruera
Wax Myrtle
Camellia
Carolina Hemlock
Virginia Pine
Palo Borracho
Borrachero
Cinnamon
Hibiscus
Lilac
Mistletoe
Strangler Fig
Horse Chestnut
Cocobolo
Shortleaf Pine
American Mountain-Ash
Crepe Myrtle
Teak
Blackthorn
Yaupon Holly
Pond Cypress
Ivy
White Spruce
Red Pine
Yew
Grand Fir
Rowan
White Ash
Atlantic White Cedar
American Yew
Desert Willow
Hazel
Saguaro
Buckthorn
Mango
Gardenia
White Walnut/Butternut
Rose Bush
Willow
Southern Live Oak
Box Elder
Russian Olive
Silver Maple
Sandalwood
Bigleaf Maple
Snakewood
Slippery Elm
Yellow Birch
Ebony
Eastern White Pine
Bloodwood
Cedar Of Lebanon
Western Larch
Engelmann Spruce
Rocky Mountain Juniper
Apricot
Black Cottonwood
Elder
Subalpine Fir
California Nutmeg
Bamboo
Chinkapin
Mountain Hemlock
Pacific Silver Fir
Black Tupelo
Coffee
Eastern Hemlock
Black Willow
Silver Lime
America's State Trees as wands
Ceiba Tree

John Torrey

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By JamesPascatore

Dr. John Torrey (1796-1873) was an American herbologist, chemist, physician, and wandmaker. Throughout much of his career, Torrey was a teacher of chemistry, often at multiple universities, he also taught Herbology for a short stint at Ilvermorny School Of Witchcraft And Wizardry, while at the same time pursuing both botanical and magi-botanical work. Dr. Torrey's botanical career focused on the flora of North America. His most renowned works include studies of the New York flora, the Mexican Boundary, the Pacific railroad surveys, as well as the uncompleted Flora of North America. Many witches and wizards call him "The Father Of Modern American Wandlore". Many famous American wandmakers including Edison Huxley Fielding, Fabrice Gander, Shikoba Wolfe, Ishmael Guggenheim, and Violetta Beauvais cite(d) him as an important influence on their work. Most of his notes are included in this book.

Torrey was born in New York City in 1796, as the second child of Capt. William and Margaret (née Nichols) Torrey. His father was of magical blood while his mother was a No-Maj, but they secretly married to avoid Rappaport's Law. In 1806, he was accepted into Ilvermorny School Of Witchcraft And Wizardry, where he was chosen by Horned Serpent, Thunderbird, and Pukwudgie. He opted for Horned Serpent and excelled in Transfiguration and Potions but his favorite subject was Herbology. During his time at school, he developed a friendship with a former convict named Amos Eaton, who escaped prison and landed a job teaching Herbology at Ilvermorny, but he also had a love for the natural sciences. Torrey spent his days off exploring the forest and studying the different plants and trees. He also took wand-making classes and constructed his first wand, made from Balsam Fir with a Horned Serpent horn, and took notes on his wand. This experience caused him to develop an enormous interest in wandlore and would dedicate his life to studying American Wandlore, compiling his notes into what he would hope to become a book. In 1815, he began the study of medicine with Wright Post, a No-Maj, qualifying in 1818. He opened an office in New York City, and engaged in the practice of medicine, at the same time devoting his leisure to botany and other scientific pursuits.

In 1817, he became one of the founders of the New York Lyceum of Natural History (now the New York Academy Of Science), and one of his first contributions to this body was his Catalogue of  Plants growing spontaneously within Thirty Miles of the City of New York (Albany, 1819). Its publication gained him the recognition of foreign and native botanists. In 1824, he issued the only volume of his Flora of the Northern and Middle States and his first book about magical plants. This used John Lindley's system of classifying flora, both magical and non-magical, a way of classifying that was not commonly used in the United States. He found the medical profession uncongenial, and on August 5, 1824, he entered the U.S. Army as an assistant surgeon and became acting professor of chemistry and geology at the West Point military academy. Three years later, he became a professor of chemistry and botany at the College of Physicians and Surgeons in New York (the medical school at Columbia University) where he stayed until 1855 when he was made professor emeritus. He returned to his alma mater Ilvermorny School Of Witchcraft And Wizardry and taught Herbology from 1829 to 1854, causing him to resign from his Army position on August 31, 1828. He made several different wands from different woods on the East Coast and wrote down the different abilities they were capable of. 

In 1836, he was appointed as herbologist for the state of New York and produced his Magical Flora of that state in 1843; while from 1838 to 1843 he carried on the publication of the earlier portions of Flora of North America, with the assistance of his pupil from Ilvermorny, Asa Gray. From 1853 he was chief assayer to the United States assay office in New York City when that office was established, but he continued to take an interest in botanical teaching until his death. In 1854, he resigned as Herbology professor and wrote The Wandlore of Eastern North America, his first book on North American Wandlore. After visiting the West, he would write another book, The Wandlore of Western North America and Magical Plants of The Western United States. From 1853 he was chief assayer to the United States assay office in New York City when that office was established, but he continued to take an interest in botanical teaching until his death. He was frequently consulted by the treasury department on matters of coinage and currency and was sent on special missions at various times to visit the different mints.

He died in 1873 in New York City. 

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