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Col. David Vance was born at or near
Winchester, Virginia, about 1745, the oldest son of
Samuel Vance and descended on the paternal side from
the DeVaux family in Normandy, Vance being a corruption
of DeVaux.
About 1774 he settled on the Catawba River in Rowan
County, later Burke County, and married there,
Priscilla Brank, daughter of Peter Brank.
Serving in the Revolutionary War as an American soldier
in the North, he was an ensign, and at the battles of
Brandywine and Germantown and at Valley Forge. In
the South he was at the battles of Musgrove Mill and
Kings Mountain and a captain.
After that war he settled at Vanceville on
Reems Creek, Burke County which is now Buncombe
County. In 1786 and 1791 he was a member from
Burke County of the North Carolina House of Commons and
in 1791 he and Colonel William Davidson from Rutherford
County introduced in that house petitions to create the
County of Buncombe.
In 1792 he became and remained the Clerk of the County
Court of that new county in whose minutes his beautiful
penmanship appears. He, and General Joseph
McDowell and Mussendine Matthews as North Carolina
commissioners superintended in 1799 the running of the
line between North Carolina and Tennessee from the
southern border of Virginia southwardly across Big
Pigeon River. In consequence of some conversation
when engaged in that work he wrote recollections of the
Battle of Kings Mountain published many years after his
death. He was a colonel of militia.
In 1813 he died and was buried at his farm on Reems
Creek.
--Heritage I, article #645, p. 354
Submitted by William E. Bryson
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