Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: December 20, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Woods or search for Woods in all documents.

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soldiers which is the most horrible we have read during the war. It says: The deponents are Caswell Woods and Elisabeth, his wife of the county of Craven. Mr. Woods is certified to by Gen. Evans as being "a respectable citizen, and loyal to our cause, which, with his being a poor man, seem to be the only causes of the fiendir, and then rode into the house. The other, who was addressed by the "Captain" sometimes as "Charlie." sometimes as "George," and "Lieutenant, " walked in. Mr. Woods had retired to bed. We copy from his deposition: "I came down stairs in a hurry, in my night-clothes, and the one on the horse said to me, You d — d old gra had the inexpressible agony of listening for the rest of the night to the screams and doleful lamentations of his wife and daughter. The statement made by Mrs. Woods in her deposition of what passed inside is truly heartrending The unparalleled villains made the poor helpless women not merely the victim of their brutal lust,