Tuesday, May 05, 2026
THE HISTORY THEY LEFT OUT
THE FOUNDERS YOU WERE NEVER TAUGHT
By the end of this, you’re going to have to wrestle with a question that doesn’t go away easy: Why were these names missing?
Not erased by accident.
Not forgotten by coincidence.
But quietly… consistently… omitted.
Because history is not just about what is told.
It is about what is chosen to be told.
And when certain names are left out long enough, a false narrative begins to feel like truth.
You were shown paintings.
You were given dates.
You were taught symbols.
But you were not always taught people.
Let’s start with one of the most iconic images tied to the birth of America, the Battle of Bunker Hill.
You’ve seen the painting.
Smoke. Chaos. Courage.
A formation of white soldiers standing in defiance.
But unless someone pointed him out to you,
you likely missed Peter Salem.
He’s there.
But he’s not centered.
Not elevated.
Not honored in proportion to what he did.
Peter Salem is widely credited with killing British Major John Pitcairn, a pivotal moment that shifted the energy of the battle and preserved American lives.
Read that again.
A Black man altered the trajectory of one of the most critical early battles of the American Revolution.
Yet visually, he is minimized.
Narratively, he is barely mentioned.
That’s not oversight.
That’s framing.
Now shift your attention to another powerful image, the crossing of the Delaware River.
Front and center stands George Washington, tall, composed, resolute.
But look closer at the men doing the work.
One of them is Prince Whipple.
Not just a passenger.
Not just a background figure.
A man physically helping carry the mission forward.
He rowed through freezing waters under the threat of death, moving an army toward a moment that would define the war.
But history froze the image around one man standing…
and blurred the ones who made that moment possible.
Now let’s talk about intelligence, because wars are not only won on battlefields.
They are won through information.
Strategy. Deception. Timing.
Enter James Armistead Lafayette.
This is not a side note in history.
This is one of the most brilliant intelligence operations of the American Revolution.
He posed as a runaway enslaved man.
Gained the trust of British General Cornwallis.
Was allowed to move freely within enemy camps.
The British believed he was loyal to them.
He wasn’t.
He fed them misinformation, carefully constructed lies that misled their strategy.
At the same time, he delivered accurate, critical intelligence to George Washington and Marquis de Lafayette.
His actions directly contributed to the American victory at Yorktown, the decisive end of the war.
Let that settle in your spirit:
A Black double agent helped bring down one of the most powerful empires on earth.
And yet…
How many classrooms ever told you that?
Let’s move from battlefield to pulpit.
Because shaping a nation isn’t just about war, it’s about ideas.
Morality. Theology. Identity.
Meet Lemuel Haynes.
A man born into a world that denied his humanity, yet rose to become one of the first ordained Black ministers in America.
He pastored predominantly white congregations.
He was a scholar.
A writer.
A voice against slavery.
He didn’t just preach Scripture, he applied it to the contradiction of a nation claiming liberty while practicing bondage.
He lived in tension.
And still stood in truth.
But where was he in your textbooks?
Now consider political leadership.
Before the nation even fully formed into what we recognize today, there were Black men holding positions of authority.
Local offices. Judicial roles. Civic influence.
Figures like Lemuel Haynes and others demonstrated that Black participation in governance is not modern, it is foundational.
This challenges a narrative many have been conditioned to believe:
that Black excellence in leadership is recent.
It is not.
It has always been present.
And then there’s the story you thought you knew.
“The British are coming!”
You learned about Paul Revere.
But the warning system that night was not a one-man operation.
Multiple riders spread the alarm.
Communities mobilized together.
Among them were individuals of African descent whose names rarely surface in mainstream retellings.
History simplified the story.
And in simplifying it, it erased the collective.
So let’s be precise.
This is not about replacing one group with another.
This is not about rewriting history.
This is about restoring completeness.
Because the danger is not just in false information, it is in partial information presented as the whole truth.
When you remove people from history, you don’t just erase them from the past.
You erase their influence on the present.
You shape perception.
You define who is seen as a builder…
and who is seen as an afterthought.
But here is the reality that cannot be undone:
Black individuals were present at the birth of this nation.
They fought.
They strategized.
They preached.
They governed.
They sacrificed.
Not as spectators.
As contributors.
So now the question is no longer just:
“Why weren’t we taught this?”
The deeper question becomes:
What does it mean that we weren’t?
What does it do to a society when entire contributions are minimized?
What does it do to identity?
To pride?
To understanding?
Because when history is incomplete, identity becomes distorted.
And when identity is distorted, so is possibility.
This is why truth matters.
Not a version.
Not a perspective shaped for comfort.
But the full, complex, sometimes uncomfortable truth.
You don’t honor history by simplifying it.
You honor it by telling it fully.
So the next time you see those paintings…
Look again.
Look past the center.
Look into the margins.
Look for the names that weren’t spoken.
Because they were always there.
And now that you see them—
You carry a responsibility.
To speak them.
To teach them.
To refuse to let them disappear again.
Because history is not just what was, it is what we choose to remember.