This article assesses the impact of the threat of forced separations on the
relationships between slaves in antebellum South Carolina. The majority of
slaves had to live under the constant threat, and sometimes the reality, o
f being separated from their loved ones. It is suggested however, that thro
ugh cross-plantation family ties, slaves managed to resist many of the pote
ntial threats to family and to marriage viability. Cross-plantation family
networks meant that local separations had a lesser impact on slave family a
nd community ties than did long-distance sales. Local sales, gifts, and div
isions of estates among heirs did mean, however that family patterns often
were multidimensional, with some family members belonging to the same owner
and others belonging to more or less distant neighbors.