Though offered a commission by Louisiana after President
Abraham Lincoln's call for volunteer troops in April 1861, Daniel returned to Halifax and instead offered his services to his native state. He was chosen
colonel of the 4th (later 14th)
Regiment of
infantry. When the period of enlistment expired, he was offered several positions, commanding the
43rd North Carolina Infantry or
45th North Carolina Infantry as well as the 2nd North Carolina Cavalry. He accepted the command of the 45th Regiment as its colonel. Daniel led four regiments from Raleigh to
Goldsboro and organized them into a
brigade; afterward, he organized two other brigades. In June 1862, he was ordered to
Petersburg, Virginia, where his brigade joined General
Robert E. Lee's
Army of Northern Virginia just before the
Seven Days Battles, though it took no active part in the combat. Daniel was commissioned
brigadier general on September 1, 1862, making him one of five men from
Halifax County to attain that rank in the Confederate Army. He spent the fall of 1862 with his brigade at
Drewy's Bluff in
Virginia and subsequently served in
North Carolina, although his unit saw limited combat action. Shortly after the
Battle of Chancellorsville, he was transferred to
Maj. Gen. Robert E. Rodes's
division of Richard S. Ewell's Second Corps, where he served with distinction in the
Gettysburg campaign. Daniel's large brigade, entrusted to bear the Corps Flag, consisted of the 32nd, 43rd, 45th and 53rd North Carolina, as well as the 2nd North Carolina Battalion. On July 1, 1863, Daniel's Brigade repeatedly attacked the Union positions on
McPherson's Ridge, eventually driving off the
Union brigade of Col.
Roy Stone. Initially, after his brigade's first assault was repulsed, Daniel heroically galloped about his retreating men, successfully rallying them and launching another assault. Daniel's men suffered the greatest losses of any brigade in the corps on the first day of the battle. During the
Battle of Spotsylvania Court House on May 12, 1864, Daniel led his brigade in a fierce
counterattack on the "Mule Shoe" (also known as the "
Bloody Angle"), trying to recapture the important position from elements of the
Army of the Potomac, which had captured it at dawn. He was struck in the abdomen by a
Minié ball, inflicting a mortal wound. He died the next day in a
field hospital. His body was taken to
Halifax and buried in the old colonial cemetery. Unknown to Daniel, Robert E. Lee had recommended his promotion to major general just prior to his death. ==Legacy==