One day in 1989, a man called Thomas Webber's St. Paul office and asked to talk. He was a reporter for a Catholic newspaper, he said, and wanted an interview. Webber, then executive director of Planned Parenthood, agreed.
But the man wasn't a reporter. When he arrived, he closed the office door and attacked Webber. It took two employees to pull the man away, and Webber ended up in the emergency room.
During his tenure, Webber was no stranger to threats and the violence that could follow. There was a firebombing in the 1970s that destroyed Planned Parenthood's St. Paul clinic. There were pickets outside his house. His family was harassed.
"Definitely, he was targeted more than anybody in the state of Minnesota," said Connie Perpich, who began working with Webber in the early 1980s. "More than anybody, he had that on his back."
Webber led Planned Parenthood Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota for 30 years, navigating turbulent times for women's reproductive rights both at home and across the nation. He died Thursday at age 71.
Sarah Stoesz, Planned Parenthood's current president and CEO, said Webber paved the way for the work that she and the organization perform now.
"He just stood his ground year after year after year, and never backed down," she said. Webber retired in 2000.
He arrived at Minnesota's Planned Parenthood in the 1970s and made it his mission to expand its reproductive health resources, particularly for women in rural areas.