Webber wrote poetry, fiction and non-fiction. According to historian
Selwyn Cudjoe, Webber's oldest-known published work consists of three poems—"What of a Night", "Wisdom Cometh in the Morning" and "The Jealous Scribe"—which were published in the
Daily Chronicle in January and February 1916. Louis Ross, Webber's cousin, recounted to Cudjoe that he believed that Webber had started a literary magazine with Everil Ross, Louis' older brother, around 1910. Webber published his only novel,
Those That Be in Bondage in 1917. This was followed by a book of poems,
Glints from an Anvil in 1919 and ''An Innocent's Pilgrimage
, a travelogue of his journey to the United Kingdom in 1926 as part of the Guyanese delegation to the West Indian Conference, which was published in 1927. His final work, the Centenary History and Handbook of British Guiana'', was published in 1931. ==Other achievements==