Lane joined the
Confederate Army and was commissioned as a
major in the 1st North Carolina Volunteers on May 11, 1861. He participated in the
Battle of Big Bethel and was made lieutenant colonel. Further promotion came quickly and he was a
colonel and commander of the 28th North Carolina Infantry
Regiment by September 15. In the
Seven Days Battles of 1862 he was twice wounded leading his regiment. He served in
Major General A.P. Hill's division of
Thomas J. "Stonewall" Jackson's
Second Corps for
Second Bull Run and took over brigade command following the death of
Brigadier General Lawrence O. Branch at the
Battle of Antietam. He was promoted to brigadier general on November 1, 1862. When Trimble was wounded in the attack, Lane resumed temporary command of the division. In 1864, Lane continued in brigade command, through the
Overland Campaign and
Siege of Petersburg. In June, at the
Battle of Cold Harbor, he was wounded in the groin. In February and March 1865, he commanded
Cadmus M. Wilcox's division. He continued to serve during the
Appomattox Campaign, where he was paroled from
Appomattox Court House after
Robert E. Lee's surrender on April 9. == Postbellum career ==