In the shadow of despair, the true hero rises—not for glory, but because the fire within will not let the world fall without a fight."

The Movement

Webber, John Ferdinand (ca. 1786–1882).John Ferdinand Webber was born in Vermont around 1786. In the War of 1812 he served as a private in Capt. S. Dickinson's company, Thirty-first United States Infantry, from May 23, 1813, to May 31, 1814, during which time he fought in the battle of Shadage Woods. He was in Austin's colony as early as 1824 and received a headright on June 22, 1832. Sometime earlier he was married (before Michael Muldoon, according to an affidavit of his widow) to an enslaved woman, Silvia Hector. On June 11, 1834, John Cryer emancipated Silvia and her three children. The Webbers had at least eight additional children. Webber did not participate in the Texas Revolution. He was the first settler on Webber's Prairie in Travis County. Beginning in the 1840s newcomers from the Deep South resented Webber's racially mixed marriage, and ultimately he moved his household. In 1853 he bought several leagues of land on the Rio Grande downstream from Hidalgo. There he established Webber's Ranch, where his family farmed in poverty. A Unionist, he fled to Mexico during the Confederate occupation of the Rio Grande valley. He returned in May 1865 and received a pension from the United States in 1872. Webber died at his home on July 19, 1882, and was buried in the family cemetery on the levee road, a short distance above the Donna, Texas, pump. His widow died about 1892. The hamlet of Webberville in Travis County bears their name.

In the heart of every civil hero burns a truth too powerful to be silenced and too just to be ignored."