MoundLore Profile picture
Aug 2 7 tweets 3 min read Read on X
No last name.
No freedom.
No promise of anything.

In 1781, an enslaved man walked into a British camp pretending to be a runaway.

What he memorized helped end the American Revolution.

But America nearly erased his name.

🧵 Image
His name was James.
He belonged to a man named William Armistead.

Lafayette recruited him to spy for the Continental Army.

James posed as a runaway and was welcomed by the British and by Cornwallis himself.

They never saw it coming. Image
James memorized troop movements, false orders, supply routes…everything asked of him.

He passed British lies to Lafayette.
He passed real intelligence to the Americans.

He was the war’s most important double agent….without a gun, a map, or protection. Image
The intel helped trap Cornwallis at Yorktown.
That battle ended the war.

But when it was over, James returned home… and was still enslaved.

Because he wasn’t technically a soldier.

Because paperwork mattered more than sacrifice. Image
His petition for freedom was denied.

He had helped win the war….but he wasn’t free.

It took Lafayette’s personal letter to the Virginia Assembly in 1784 to change that.

Three years later, they finally let him go. Image
James took the name James Armistead Lafayette to honor the man who helped him.

He bought land.
Raised a family.
And died in 1830….still mostly forgotten.

No statue.
No textbook chapter.
No public legacy. Image
But every American owes him.

James Armistead Lafayette risked everything for a country that wasn’t his…..at least not yet.

And if you didn’t learn his name in school, that says more about history than it does about him. Image

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More from @MoundLore

Jul 31
12,900 years ago, North America burned.

Mammoths vanished. Ice surged back. Clovis disappeared.

And across the continent, a scorched, platinum-rich layer remains.

What happened?

Did a comet wipe out the first great American culture?

🧵 Image
Clovis were masters of stone.

Their fluted spear points….lethal and elegant spread across the continent like wildfire.

For over 500 years, they thrived.

Then… silence.
No war. No slow decline.

Just a dark band in the soil and bones. Image
That dark band is found at dozens of Clovis sites:

Microspherules (melted rock droplets)

Nanodiamonds

Platinum spikes

Charcoal-rich “black mat” sediment

Meltglass formed at temps over 2,000°C Image
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Read 8 tweets
Jul 31
They say Mississippians were “primitive.”

But they built star-aligned cities, buried their dead with sacred copper, and shared a symbolic code across 1,000 miles.

It wasn’t a myth.
It wasn’t a cult.
It was a civilizational language.

The Southeastern Ceremonial Complex.

🧵Image
This wasn’t religion in the Western sense.
No temples. No scripture.

Instead: copper plates. Shell gorgets. Bird warriors. Weeping eyes.

A shared visual language of power and balance….spoken from Spiro to Moundville, from Cahokia to Florida.

Not fiction.
Not guesswork.
We’ve found the evidence.Image
Its motifs were precise.

The Birdman — wings extended, eyes forked, warrior’s stance.

The Weeping Eye — a tear from the cosmos, etched in shell.

The Hand and Eye — power, perception, portals.

The Horned Serpent — guardian of the watery deep.

These weren’t decorations.
They were maps….to the sky above, the world below, and the soul within.Image
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Read 8 tweets
Jul 28
The Midwest doesn’t just get hot in the summer.
It turns tropical.

And it’s not just the heat.
It’s corn sweat.

An invisible flood of moisture, pumped skyward by millions of plants.
It’s real It’s measurable.

And most people have never even heard of this hidden force.

🧵Image
It starts with biology.

Corn “sweats” through thousands of tiny pores in its leaves.

The process is transpiration….plants releasing water vapor into the air.

On a hot day, an acre of corn can dump 4,000+ gallons of water skyward.

It’s not a metaphor.
It’s science. Image
This isn’t new.

In the 1800s, farmers knew their fields affected the weather.

Settlers wrote about “muggy winds off the maize.”

But it wasn’t until NASA’s MODIS satellite in the 2000s that we began measuring corn sweat’s full scale.

By then, the public had stopped listening. Image
Read 7 tweets
Jul 27
One war. One lie.
One map that changed everything.

In 1845, James K. Polk took office with a plan to grow America….fast.

By 1849, the U.S. had taken half of Mexico, occupied the Pacific coast, and swallowed Indigenous lands by the millions.

This is the war few know.

🧵 Image
Polk had four goals:

1.Slash tariffs
2.Reinstate the treasury
3.Claim Oregon
4.Seize California and the Southwest

He told no one about a second term….he didn’t need one.

He planned to use policy where he could, and war where he must. Image
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Oregon was shared with Britain. Expansionists wanted it all.

“54°40′ or Fight!” became the slogan.

But Polk avoided war cutting a clean deal at the 49th parallel.

In one stroke, the U.S. gained:

•Oregon
•Washington
•Idaho
•Parts of Montana and Wyoming

A quiet win but just the beginning.Image
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Read 7 tweets
Jul 27
There are scars across the Southeastern U.S.

Shallow, elliptical, rimmed with sand.
Over half a million.Each one tilted the same way, like something swept the land.

They’re called the Carolina Bays.

And to this day, no one can explain them.

🧵Image
They stretch from Maryland to Florida, some over a mile wide.

But here’s the strange part:
Almost every one points the same direction NW to SE.

Not random. Not chaotic.
They look like impact shadows.
But there’s no crater.

No debris.
No blast. Image
Mainstream geologists say wind and thaw shaped them during the last Ice Age.

It’s neat but it doesn’t explain the precision.

The scale.
The symmetry.
Or why we don’t see new ones forming. Image
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Read 7 tweets
Jul 25
There once was a woman who walked into Europe’s oldest archives
and found sacred Aztec and Mixtec texts mislabeled as “curiosities,” locked in drawers, untouched for centuries.

She wasn’t a professor.
She wasn’t invited.
She wasn’t supposed to find them.

But she did and everything changed.

🧵Image
Her name was Zelia Nuttall.

Born in San Francisco in 1857.
Daughter of a Mexican mother and Irish-American father.

No PhD. No tenure. No field school.

But by the 1890s, she was crisscrossing Florence, Madrid, and Oxford….tracking down codices even the experts forgot existed.Image
In Florence, she identified the Codex Magliabechiano an Aztec ritual manuscript hidden in the Biblioteca Nazionale for over 300 years.

In Oxford, she brought attention to the Codex Zouche-Nuttall a Mixtec screenfold recording dynasties and sacred wars.

She translated, published, and preserved.

Now both are foundational.Image
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Read 7 tweets

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