Yeah I definitely think they would celebrate it. Especially considering one of their co-founders was a Pilgrim, so he was probably there on the night of the first Thanksgiving feast. I'm sure it's an honored tradition to have a feast on Thanksgiving. Because I'm American, I just love the thought of a wizarding school with American traditions. Just the thought of what the 4th of July would be like with magic. And then memorials like Veterans Day and Memorial Day would surely still be observed. In regards to a series, I don't necessarily want another series like Harry Potter, where they go through the years. Just some background short stories on Pottermore would be great for context and so we can learn about the customs in the American wizarding world. Professors, classes, school layouts, possible MACUSA headquarters in other parts of the country. The British wizarding world is pretty one-toned because it's so small. New York, Maine, and Massachusetts alone are bigger than Great Britain, so I wonder how different things are around the country. Is Woolworth the only MACUSA headquarters or are there others? Hogwarts is pretty massive and it only teaches the students in a country of like 50 million. The U.S. has 330 million, so how big is Ilvermorny? Are there different branches in different parts of the country now? That's the stuff I want to see, not really another 7 years (maybe 8 since legal ages are different in the U.S.) of classes and stories, especially since they would take 2 years each before them. I'm okay with some simple Pottermore stories on Ilvermorny and the American wizarding world in general.