The priceless nostalgia of childhood family road trips

Dad at the wheel. Mom holding the map. And us in the backseat, watching America go by.

A family on a road trip.
(Image credit: Darumo/iStock)

By the time I turned 15, I could rattle off a handful of exciting places I'd visited with my family: the St. Louis Arch, Lincoln's Tomb, the Civil Rights Museum in Memphis where Martin Luther King was assassinated, the Smithsonian, Vicksburg, the Great Smoky Mountains. We ate juicy peaches from a tiny roadside stand in Georgia and my father even tried alligator meat at Margaritaville in New Orleans' famed French Quarter.

Nothing screams summer quite like the frenetic excitement of a vacation looming on the horizon. Some people jet to Europe or embark on a Disney cruise to spend their idle summer days relaxing or reading trashy novels by the pool. I owe much of my childhood adventures to that classic rite of passage: the family road trip.

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Melissa Blake

Melissa Blake is a freelance writer and blogger from Illinois. She covers disability rights and women's issues and has written for The New York Times, Cosmopolitan, Good Housekeeping, Glamour and Racked, among others. Read her blog, So About What I Said, and follow her on Twitter.