The Four Houses of Ilvermorny
"Ah yes - of course we all know that there are four types of children: good, bad, smart, and miscellaneous. Ms. Sheppard, you may find that, here at Ilvermorny, we do things a bit... differently than you may be familiar with from Hogwarts." - Phineus Maximus, Deputy Headmaster, IlvermornyWhen Isolt Steward founded the school with her children and husband, Ilvermorny was modeled after the stories she heard from her family about the school. Having never attended the school personally, Isolt had a very idealized version of the school that she passed to her own family who would go on to be considered the founders of the school. One of the things core to that idea, in Isolt's eyes, was the four great houses.
The exact choices behind the various houses of Ilvermorny have been lost into myth at this point, though modern scholars - and gossips who have nothing better to talk about - like to say that the Four Great Houses of Ilvermorny represent portions of the human being. It was once said that Isolt's daughter, Rionach, stated that she believed that was entirely rubbish and that her mother had no such goal in mind but, none the less, the story had made its way into the general wizarding public in Americas and the World as a whole.
Sorting at Ilvermorny occurs by first year students stepping into the Gordian Knot magically engraved onto the center of the Entrance Hall, one at a time, while students from the older years stand in the circular balconies above. There they stand, watched over by the statues of the four mascots of the Houses until one reacts, claiming the student for their house. At that point, the student is escorted into a chamber off the entrance hall where the Wand Choosing Ceremony occurs; although Rappaport's Law has long since been repealed, it is still tradition that all students get their "adult" wand when they arrive at Ilvermorny.
Although rare, it is possible for multiple houses to try to claim the same student. In such a case, it is left up to the student to decide for themselves which house they wish to call home. Very rarely - perhaps once a generation or so - all four houses will attempt to claim the same student. Traditionally, this has marked the student for greatness. The last such student to be so chosen was Seraphina Picquery, who was elected to the position of President of MaCUSA during the 1920s.
The Houses




