What family holidays looked like the decade you were born
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Time travel
What did holidays look like in the decade you were born? Whether you spent your childhood holidays camping, road-tripping or building sandcastles by the sea, these nostalgic snaps will transport you back in time.
Read on to see what family vacations looked like through the ages...
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1940s: a family camp out in the forest
This was a decade shaped by the Second World War and, even post-war, most families spent their holiday time close to home. Trailer parks and campsites were top places to escape, with destinations such as the Adirondack Mountains in New York proving popular with outdoorsy types. Here a mother serves dinner cooked over a campfire to her family, perhaps after a long day of hiking.
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1940s: sunbathers on the beach in Atlantic City, New Jersey, USA
In the post-war years, beachside destinations on America's East Coast boomed. Here families, friends and couples relax on Atlantic City's sandy beach, while the hotel-lined boardwalk thrums behind them.
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1940s: a family buys cotton candy at Coney Island, New York City, USA
Farther up the coast, Coney Island – with its theme parks, sandy beach and family-friendly amusements – was another place that thrived towards the end of the decade. Cotton candy is the snack of choice here and, in this nostalgic shot, a child gladly takes a sweet candy cloud from a smiling vendor.
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1940s: children play on a Florida beach in 1943
Not all destinations had as many bells and whistles, though. Where there weren't rides, puppet shows and candy-floss stands, little beach-goers would make do with a bucket and spade. Here a young brother and sister build a sandcastle on a beach in Florida, USA.
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1940s: beach-goers at South Sands in Devon, England, in 1944
Across the pond, vacations unfolded in much the same way as they did in the States during the 1940s. This snap shows bathers and beach-baskers on South Sands in Devon at the tail end of the war, not long after the spot had been reopened.
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1940s: vacationers on a beach in Bognor Regis, England
As the war drew to a close, resort towns such as England's Bognor Regis were flourishing once more. You can barely see the shingle for sunbathers in this photograph taken in 1945. The promenade lining the beach hums with people too.
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1950s: a beach-ready family pack into a car in Florida, USA in 1957
The automobile industry boomed in the post-war decades and the great American road trip had its heyday. Many Americans would likely spend at least some of their holiday time on the road, winding up in beachside resorts where they'd while away a week or so. This clan from Tallahassee, Florida are loaded up with beach balls and water doughnuts, ready for their family escape.
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1950s: a family enjoy the view in Grand Teton National Park, Wyoming, USA
While some families made a beeline for the coast, others decided to enjoy America's backyard with their cars, trailers and motorhomes. Here the Tetons rise above Jackson Lake in the Grand Teton National Park, established in 1929. A young family look out at the view, picnic in hand, trailer parked up at the water's edge.
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1950s: a family water-skis at Cypress Gardens, Florida, USA
Tourism boomed in the Sunshine State in this post-war decade, with sun-seekers flocking here from all over America. Top destinations included Miami, St Petersburg and St Augustine. This water-skiing family was snapped in Winter Haven's Cypress Gardens, often tipped as Florida's first theme park.
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1950s: crowds throng before Disneyland's Sleeping Beauty Castle, California, USA
In 1955, tourism in the States would change forever, as Walt Disney opened the first Disney park in Anaheim, California. It soon became the yardstick by which all future theme parks would be measured, drawing visitors from all over. A trip to Disneyland was the dream holiday for many families across the country and beyond.
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1950s: vacationers on Chicken Bone Beach in Atlantic City, New Jersey, USA
However, these decades also represented a torrid period of American history. Racial tensions were rife and America’s shores remained officially segregated right up until the 1960s (with unofficial divides remaining even after the Civil Rights Act was passed in 1964). Strands such as Chicken Bone Beach (pictured), an exclusively African-American area of Atlantic City’s shoreline, were formed in the first half of the 20th century. It’s pictured here buzzing with beachgoers circa the 1950s.
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1950s: Sammy Davis Jr. and friends bask on Chicken Bone Beach
These beaches mostly attracted middle-class African-American families, with celebrities gracing their shores too. This nostalgic snap shows legendary entertainer Sammy Davis Jr. hanging out with friends and fans on Chicken Bone Beach in the Fifties. The beach earned its name from the bones left behind by visitors who picnicked on fried chicken here, and a plaque commemorates the history of the spot today.
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1950s: holidaymakers ride a buggy at Butlin's holiday camp, England
In Britain, holiday camps such as Butlin's, first established in the 1930s in Skegness, on the east coast of England, gained in popularity. Here, pleasure-seeking holidaymakers could expect snug chalets, a swimming pool, family-friendly games in the daytime and nighttime entertainment. In this photo, two women enjoy a buggy ride at the now shuttered Butlin's camp in Clacton.
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1950s: children play on the beach in Angmering, England
The seaside escape remained the ultimate British vacation through the 1950s – think ice-cream and fish and chips, pony rides and puppet shows, and the windswept shores of the English coast. In this 1954 photo, families play on the sand in Angmering in West Sussex.
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1960s: sunbathers on the beach at Tossa de Mar, Costa Brava, Spain
By the 1960s, Spanish seaside resorts such as Benidorm in the Costa Blanca buzzed with people, attracting tourists from Britain and beyond. Package holidays grew in popularity during this decade too. In this Sixties snap, holidaymakers bask on a beach in Tossa de Mar, Costa Brava in northeastern Spain.
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1960s: vacationers on a beach in Miami, Florida, USA
Back on American shores, Florida remained the destination of choice through the 1960s. New hotels, resorts and amusements continued to spring up near the coast, and the Sunshine State was flooded with people each summer. Here sun-worshippers relax beneath the palms on Miami Beach in southern Florida.
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1960s: families relax around the pool at a resort in the Catskills, New York, USA
Resorts weren't just blossoming in the Sunshine State, though. They were shooting up all over the country, from way out west in California to up north in top holiday states such as New York. Popular spots included Tony Leone's Resort in the mountainous Catskills region – the families here are unperturbed by the clouds as they crowd around the onsite pool.
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1960s: skiers gather in the foothills of a mountain in Utah, USA
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1960s: families watch a puppet show on Blackpool Beach, England
The northwest of England laid claim to one of Britain's most popular holiday spots in the 1960s. In summer, Blackpool Beach, with its piers and promenade, would play host to throngs of holidaymakers, who rode donkeys, ate ice cream and lazed on the sands. It's still a popular spot today, and in this heartwarming 1960s shot Blackpool Tower is the backdrop for a family puppet show.
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1970s: families aboard a Boeing 747
In the decades leading up to the 1970s, air travel – and therefore holidays abroad – had been reserved for the very wealthiest in society. But the Seventies saw the invention of the Boeing 747, the world's first jumbo jet, leading to cheaper plane tickets. This opened up air travel to America's middle classes and here families enjoy the cabin of this new kind of aeroplane.
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1970s: tourists exploring Athens' Parthenon, Greece, in 1971
Greece became one of Europe's most popular holiday destinations from the 1960s onwards, joining ranks with the likes of Spain and France. It offered the prospect of culture and ancient history for middle-class travellers, who previously may have been unable to afford the airfare here. Some chose to bring their whole family along for the adventure too. In this 1970s photo, international tourists take in the Parthenon, part of the Acropolis of Athens.
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1970s: passengers enjoy the sunshine onboard a cruise ship
Cruising also became more affordable and accessible throughout the 1970s. In its Golden Age, cruising had been about extravagant fine dining and tinkling piano music in opulent lounges – but by the Seventies that had been replaced by loud, proud evening entertainment and an altogether more relaxed atmosphere. In this sun-drenched snap from 1971, passengers relax on the deck of the SS Oronsay, an Orient Line cruise ship.
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1970s: children ride with Goofy at Walt Disney World, Florida, USA
Another milestone in the history of family holidays came in 1971. It was in this year that Walt Disney World’s Magic Kingdom (and a handful of accompanying resorts) opened in Florida. The larger-than-life site set the bar for future theme parks, and many family getaways in this decade involved Mickey and the gang. Here, Goofy accompanies a group of delighted kids on the Mad Tea Party Ride at the Magic Kingdom.
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1970s: a young family picnic on a New Jersey beach, USA
But despite the theme parks, the cruise ships and the call of the Continent, many Americans still holidayed closer to home. Here a young family picnic on a quiet beach on a sun-drenched afternoon in New Jersey.
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1970s: this family makes a splash in the Atlantic
America’s windswept Atlantic shores provided plenty of opportunity for adventure. This 1970s snap shows a young family playing with an inflatable raft off the coast of New Jersey, USA. The jazzy swimwear is oh-so-Seventies too.
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1980s: a crowded beach in Palamós, Costa Brava, Spain
By the Eighties, Spain's beaches (and many in southern France too) were thronged with people come the summertime, following a steady uptick in tourism since the 1950s and 1960s. Here families cruise on inflatables in the ocean, or sit elbow-to-elbow on the shores, shading themselves under umbrellas. This snap was taken in Palamós, Costa Brava, Spain in the early Eighties.
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1980s: a tourist group ride a boat in The Bahamas
While Brits flocked to sun-soaked European shores, the Caribbean and the drew in middle-class American tourists who favoured destinations such as The Bahamas and St Lucia. Here a group of vacationers pose for the camera as they enjoy an organised boat tour in The Bahamas in the mid-1980s.
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1980s: throngs of sun-seekers at Coney Island, New York, USA
Back on American soil, the shores were busier than ever too. Here, at the tail end of the decade, Coney Island's sandy strand swarms with people. Rubber rings, umbrellas, beach towels and balls add splashes of colour to Brooklyn's humming beach, as families enjoy their holiday time.
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1980s: kids and families play in Lake Michigan, Chicago, USA
It’s not all about the seaside, though – America’s Great Lakes have long been a vacation spot for beach bums too. In this 1987 snap, sun seekers splash in Lake Michigan at Chicago’s Margaret T. Burroughs Beach (formerly 31st Beach). Now a diverse city strand, this beach was once segregated and designated for Black visitors. And in contrast to the peaceful scenes shown here, a Black teenager named Eugene Williams was killed in these waters, when he unknowingly drifted into a “white zone”, triggering the Chicago race riot of 1919. A memorial for Williams is held on the beach each year.
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1980s: tourists in front of Epcot's famous dome, Florida, USA
Theme parks remained a staple fixture of many a family holiday during the Eighties. The Disney parks in both California and Florida thrived and, in 1982, Walt Disney World enjoyed another glittering addition. Epcot, a land dedicated to innovation and the future, gave families another reason to visit the mammoth Sunshine State resort in this decade – here tourists walk before Epcot's famous geodesic dome and fountain.
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1980s: park-goers at Efteling in the Netherlands
It wasn't just America's larger-than-life theme parks that were drawing family travellers, either. The Netherlands' Efteling – often tipped as one of Europe's greatest theme parks – drew scores of tourists too. Opened in the Fifties, the park was booming by the Eighties, and this shot shows families wandering through the site, dwarfed by the titanic loops of the Python roller coaster.
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1990s: crowds of holidaymakers at Disneyland Paris, France
In 1992, Disney came to Europe with the opening of Disneyland Paris (then Euro Disney Resort). Brits and holidaymakers from the Continent flocked to the magical park throughout the decade, and a trip to Euro Disney became the holiday of dreams for the Nineties kid. In this 1997 photo, the park is filled to the brim as colourful celebrations for its fifth birthday are in full swing.
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1990s: a young family on a beach in Mauritius
The sinking costs of air travel and the rise of the internet meant people began looking even further afield when planning their holidays. Previously out-of-reach destinations now fell within the grasp of many middle-class families. Here a young family bask on a stunning white-sand beach in Mauritius.
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1990s: a tourist resort in the Canary Islands
Still, though, Spain's popularity showed no sign of abating and by the Nineties its shores were jam-packed with vast hotels, timeshare resorts and villas, which drew tourists for fly-and-flop breaks in summer and beyond. This aerial snap from 1993 shows a white-washed holiday resort in the Canaries.
2000s: passengers enjoy the deck on a Virgin Islands cruise
By the Noughties, cruising was truly a family affair. Most mainstream ships had a packed roster of family entertainment, plus kid-friendly pools and activities. Here cruisers of all ages enjoy the delights of the deck on board the Carnival Fascination cruise ship, which includes a twirling blue water slide. The lush isle of St Thomas rises from the Caribbean Sea in the background.
2000s: families on Four Mile Beach in Australia
The world continued to shrink in this decade too, with families who were wealthy enough making bucket-list-style trips and exploring all corners of the globe. Here families and couples sunbathe on Four Mile Beach in Port Douglas, Queensland, a jumping-off point for the Great Barrier Reef.
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2000s: a little girl enjoys an ice cream on Bournemouth Beach, England
Even so, for many, still nothing compares to the nostalgia of a seaside escape on home shores, whether that's the windswept coast of Britain, or the powder-white sands of the Sunshine State. Taken in 2000, this throwback snap captures a little girl enjoying an ice cream on Bournemouth beach in southern England. It's the British seaside summed up in a single shot.
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2010s: tourists record city breaks for Instagram
A new social media platform was introduced in 2010 and with it brought a whole new meaning to holiday snaps. Instagram was born and capturing every highlight of a holiday, then proudly posting it for followers to see, became a worldwide phenomenon. Family city breaks were even more popular and posing next to landmarks, such as the Leaning Tower of Pisa in Italy's Tuscany region (pictured), was the 21st century equivalent of sending a postcard.
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2010s: a family enjoys a glamping holiday in California, USA
Although the term 'glamping' can be traced back to 2006, it wasn't until the 2010s when families worldwide took advantage of camping in the great outdoors but without the need to rough it. Glamping properly gained popularity when carpeted yurts kitted out with an electricity supply, real beds and running water made the joy of camping more comfortable. This photo shows a family with their dog enjoying a picturesque set-up next to the Russian River in northern California, USA.
2010s: multiple generations at an Airbnb
Although the unique concept of Airbnb was thought up in 2007, it wasn't until the 2010s – when the app and instant booking were introduced – that it really took off. The idea that you could rent someone else's super-smart, quirky or homely property as an alternative accommodation option, often at a fraction of the price of a hotel, quickly became a hit with families. This image shows grandparents holidaying with children and grandchildren, at a villa in the US, as multi-generational trips became the norm.
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