So here's a trick - if you only know the Tweet ID, it doesn't matter the user ID you put in the Twitter URL, you'll actually get the link to the Tweet you want.
e.g. https://twitter.com/andypiper/statuses/807811447862468608 will still show you the actual original Tweet, even though I did not send it. It is of course shown with the correct original author attribution, but this is a handy shortcut if all you have is a Tweet ID.
Knowing this information, you have two options to embed your Tweet in a page:
Go to publish.twitter.com and paste in the URL above - it will show you a Tweet embed, and provide the markup code
Programmatically, call Twitter's oEmbed API. Here's an example of doing so using Twitter's twurl tool. You can use the resulting html value from the JSON response to embed the Tweet into your page. Again, notice that I used my Twitter handle, but the actual Tweet ID, and the resulting output refers to the original Tweet from the original poster.
$ twurl -H publish.twitter.com "/oembed?url=https://twitter.com/andypiper/status/807811447862468608"
{
"url": "https:\/\/twitter.com\/tiagopog\/status\/807811447862468608",
"author_name": "Tiago Guedes",
"author_url": "https:\/\/twitter.com\/tiagopog",
"html": "\u003Cblockquote class=\"twitter-tweet\"\u003E\u003Cp lang=\"en\" dir=\"ltr\"\u003EI will never forget my first HTTP request measured in µs :-) \u003Ca href=\"https:\/\/twitter.com\/hashtag\/elixir?src=hash\"\u003E#elixir\u003C\/a\u003E \u003Ca href=\"https:\/\/twitter.com\/hashtag\/phoenix?src=hash\"\u003E#phoenix\u003C\/a\u003E\u003C\/p\u003E— Tiago Guedes (@tiagopog) \u003Ca href=\"https:\/\/twitter.com\/tiagopog\/status\/807811447862468608\"\u003EDecember 11, 2016\u003C\/a\u003E\u003C\/blockquote\u003E\n\u003Cscript async src=\"\/\/platform.twitter.com\/widgets.js\" charset=\"utf-8\"\u003E\u003C\/script\u003E",
"width": 550,
"height": null,
"type": "rich",
"cache_age": "3153600000",
"provider_name": "Twitter",
"provider_url": "https:\/\/twitter.com",
"version": "1.0"
}