45 Vintage Spring Break Photos From The 1980s And 1990s
Go back to a time when MTV still played music videos.
On a spring day in 1986, millions of people across the United States tuned into MTV — and found their screens flooded with images of raucous concerts, sunny beaches, drunk coeds, wet T-shirt contests, and neon bathing suits. Spring break had arrived in the American living room.
The MTV broadcast offered viewers a front row seat to springtime debauchery, and captured the rapidly accelerating spring break trend. Hundreds of thousands of young people had started to flock to Florida in the 1980s, where they partied to such an extent that the mayor of Fort Lauderdale — or “Fort Liquordale” — begged them to stay away.
A group of brightly adorned Club MTV dancers. 1990. u/The_Beast_Within89/Reddit Boys and girls enjoying spring break. Circa 1982-1993.Keith McManus/Blurb Books A man with a rose tattoo looks over the beach. Circa 1982-1993.Keith McManus/Blurb Books Eminem, Dre, and Xzibit performing during MTV Spring Break 1999.u/Squibba_lol1/Reddit A woman smiles in the sun during spring break in Florida. Circa 1982-1993.Keith McManus/Blurb Books A boy takes a drink with the beach in the background during spring break. Circa 1982-1993.Keith McManus/Blurb Books A man flexes his muscles before the spring break crowd. Circa 1982-1993.Keith McManus/Blurb Books Spring breakers in Port Aransas, Texas. Circa 1985. u/polarice246/Reddit A sunbather takes in some rays in Florida. Circa 1982-1993.Keith McManus/Blurb Books A crowd of women line up before a bikini contest in Florida. Circa 1982-1993.Keith McManus/Blurb Books Spring breakers on a beer run in Florida. Circa 1980s. u/Werkstadt/Reddit A spring break crowd in Florida. Circa 1982-1993.Keith McManus/Blurb Books Spring break at Myrtle Beach. 1979.u/bls1114/Reddit A spring break couple finds a private moment away from the crowd. Circa 1982-1993.Keith McManus/Blurb Books A couple gets close on a car during spring break in Florida. 1985.Keith McManus/Blurb Books A couple snuggles on a beach chair next to a lone man. 1986.Keith McManus/Blurb Books A group of girls on spring break in Daytona Beach, Florida. 1984. u/Rineheitzgabot/Reddit Women sunbathing in front of parked cars during spring break. Circa 1982-1993.Keith McManus/Blurb Books Spring break revelers play some music from the back of a car. Circa 1982-1993.Keith McManus/Blurb Books A man tears off his T-shirt in front of a spring break crowd in Florida. Circa 1982-1993.Keith McManus/Blurb Books A young man taking a breather from the spring break festivities in his hotel, with several Miller Lite cans on the bedside table.u/ghrosenb/Reddit A couple embraces during spring break in Daytona Beach, Florida. Circa 1982-1993.Keith McManus/Blurb Books A man jumps into a pool as a large crowd watches. Between 1960 and 1985, spring break crowds in Florida swelled from about 50,000 to 370,000.u/rjr49/Reddit A girl on a stage in a bikini during spring break. Circa 1982-1993.Keith McManus/Blurb Books A spring breaker in the 1980s.u/pnw-foot-hoofer/Reddit A group of men take a look at a group of women nearby. Circa 1982-1993.Keith McManus/Blurb Books MTV first aired spring break coverage in 1986 — making the annual festivities a nationwide phenomenon. u/RealMccoy13x/Reddit Spring break revelers take in the hot weather from atop their car in Florida. Circa 1985.u/Sacred_camel/Reddit Two people standing near a pole on the beach. Circa 1982-1993.Keith McManus/Blurb Books Spring break at South Padre Island, Texas. 1983.u/Suitable_Mention_139/Reddit Spring breakers hanging out by the pool in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. 1985.u/hailfag/Reddit Spring break on Mustang Island, Texas. 1988.u/absolutefiend/Reddit A group takes a break from the beach with a Taco Bell run in Daytona Beach, Florida. 1988.u/dj3po1/Reddit A crowd of people on spring break. Circa 1982-1993.Keith McManus/Blurb Books Spring breakers in the back of a Jeep in Florida. Circa 1980s. u/earthmoonsun/Reddit Girls in bathing suits. Circa 1982-1993.Keith McManus/Blurb Books A spring break reveler stands near a chain link fence. Circa 1982-1993.Keith McManus/Blurb Books Spring breakers pose for a photo in their brightly colored jackets. Daytona Beach, Florida. 1991. u/taskforcealpha/Reddit A tired spring breaker takes a nap on the beach. Circa 1982-1993.Keith McManus/Blurb Books Spring break revelers on South Padre Island, Texas. 1987.Reddit A woman in a bathing suit makes a face for the camera as a man looks on behind her. 1987.Keith McManus/Blurb Books Not everyone was welcoming to the hundreds of thousands of spring breakers who flooded Florida. Here, a protestor holds a sign over sunbathers that reads: "You Are Headed For Hell!" Circa 1982-1993.Keith McManus/Blurb Books Women with "Party Naked" T-shirts raise a glass during spring break. 1985.u/SmokeTheFire/Reddit A boy in a crowded bar. Circa 1982-1993.Keith McManus/Blurb Books Two spring breakers show off their beer collection at the end of a spring break road trip. 1981. u/ATHYRIO/RedditBut the spring break tradition didn't start in the 1980s. In fact, the idea of spring break arguably comes from ancient times.
However, it ramped up in the United States in the second half of the 20th century, when books, movies, and, of course, MTV, made flocking to the beach during spring break and having a wild time something of a cultural juggernaut.
Take a look back at some of the wildest days of spring break in the photo gallery above, and read on below to learn more about how spring vacation became such a rite of passage for young Americans.
The First Seeds Of Spring Break
Though spring break feels like a modern tradition, its origins can actually be traced back to the ancient Greeks. Hundreds of years ago, people would celebrate Anthesteria, a festival honoring Dionysus, the god of wine. According to The Atlantic, women would decorate themselves with flowers and men would see who could drink a glass of wine the fastest.
Various iterations of this continued throughout the centuries, including celebrations like Carnival. But the makings of the modern-day American spring break emerged in the 1930s, when a Colgate University swim coach named Sam Ingram decided to train his swimmers in Fort Lauderdale. Before long, the city became a magnet for swimmers and their friends.
From here, spring break began to draw more people and by the 1950s, it had become a destination for college students. In 1958, a Michigan State University professor named Glendon Swarthout decided to go to Florida after he heard that his students were planning a trip. He recounted what he saw during spring break in a novel, Where the Boys Are. (Swarthout originally titled his book "Unholy Spring" because it took place around Easter time).

u/DynastyFan85/RedditA poster for Where The Boys Are (1960), the film that popularized the concept of spring break.
Swarthout's book was made into a hit movie in 1960, and spring break suddenly became a nationwide phenomenon. According to The Cut, some 50,000 college students flocked to Florida for spring break the next year. Before then, the spring break crowd had numbered just 20,000.
And as Time reports, that number jumped to 370,000 by 1985.
Spring Break In The 1980s And 1990s
By the 1980s, spring break had become bigger (and given the prevalence of neon, brighter). And spring break got even wilder when MTV started broadcasting from Daytona Beach in 1986. Not only did Americans suddenly have a front row seat to the festivities, but The New York Times reports that the broadcast also encouraged the spread of spring break elsewhere.
That was welcome news to many Fort Lauderdale locals, who'd had enough of living in "Fort Liquordale." The city imposed stricter liquor laws in the 1980s, and the mayor, Robert Dressler, even went on Good Morning America to announce that wild spring breakers were no longer welcome.
But that didn't stop the party. Throughout the 1980s and 1990s, young American college students continued to travel to sunny spots in places like Florida, Texas, and Mexico. In those locales, the heady days of jello shots, wet T-shirt contests, and barely-there bathing suits gleefully continued.
Some segments of society reacted to the wild spring break atmosphere with alarm, broadcasting warnings about binge drinking and risky sex. According to Time, some universities even started passing out "safe break bags," which included things like sunscreen, condoms, and a sexual-assault manual. At the same time, others sought to take advantage of the nonstop debauchery: In the 1990s, Joe Francis started his infamous Girls Gone Wild videos.
In the decades since, the spring break tradition has remained strong. Bustle reports that 40 percent of college students traveled for spring break in 2015, spending almost $1 billion to gather along sunny coasts in Texas and Florida.
Towns, well accustomed to the annual festivities, have come up with their own ways of coping. A sheriff in Bay County, Florida even designed a "beach jail" for partiers who became too rowdy.
"What we've built looks like two dog kennels with rubber flooring," the sheriff explained. "You're talking about two million people coming through our area in a 47-day period. And they did not come to go to church."
Without question, spring break can be an adventure. But as the nostalgic have noted, it's also a fleeting thing. Once you graduate, you most likely feel too old to fly to Daytona Beach and do jello shots.
"After college, you can't go to spring break anymore," one former reveler told The New York Times. "It's no longer socially acceptable. When it's done, it's done, and — at least for you — it's not coming back."
After looking through these vintage spring break photos from the 1980s and 1990s, peruse some of the hottest fashion trends from the 1990s. Or, enjoy these photos of '90s grunge that capture the era of Nirvana and Pearl Jam.
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