Vance entered the Confederacy forming the "Buncombe County Life Guards" (later, Company H of the 29th North Carolina Infantry Regiment). After training at Camp Patton, in Asheville, Vance was unanimously elected as the regiment's colonel. The regiment was sent to eastern
Tennessee to guard the bridges on the Bristol-Chattanooga road. They all took up position at the
Cumberland Gap, seeing their first real action on March 24, 1862. They later accompanied
Edmund Kirby Smith into
Kentucky, and on December 30, 1862, Vance commanded the
brigade of
James E. Rains, after his death, at the
Battle of Murfreesboro. There were many casualties in the brigade, with Vance's own horse killed beneath him by a shell. After the battle, Vance had to step down from his post as he contracted
typhoid fever, but he was commended for his service by General John P. McCown, which led to Jefferson Davis commissioning him as brigadier general on March 4, 1863.
Capture After a lengthy recovery from his illness, Vance was placed in charge of the North Carolina–Tennessee mountains under the command of General Braxton Bragg, with orders to harass the Union flanks and disrupt the flow of enemy supplies. On January 14, 1864, he was assigned a mission at
Cosby Creek, Tennessee. Vance intercepted a major supply train going to General Ambrose Burnside's troops near Knoxville, but when he tried to take the wagons to North Carolina, Vance, and nearly all of his troops, were captured by Sergeant
Everett W. Anderson of the
15th Pennsylvania Cavalry.
Imprisonment Vance was detained at various Union prisons in Nashville, Louisville, Fort Chase (Ohio), and
Fort Delaware until a former prisoner of Vance's, Reverend Nathaniel G. Taylor, intervened on Vance's behalf, as Vance had treated him well and, eventually, released him President Lincoln issued Vance a special parole, allowing him to buy clothes for other Confederate soldiers. On March 10, 1865, Lincoln granted Vance a conditional full pardon, allowing him to return to North Carolina, but requiring him not to fight again. ==Post-War career==