For a brief moment in the 1970s, Michigan decided that 18-year-olds were mature enough to vote, serve in the military… and drink.
What could possibly go wrong?
In 1972, Michigan lowered the legal drinking age from 21 to 18. The logic at the time was pretty simple: if you’re old enough to be drafted into the Vietnam War, you should be old enough to have a beer.
Sounds reasonable on paper.
But here’s where things got… messy.
Almost overnight, Michigan became a magnet for teenagers from neighboring states like Ohio, Indiana, and Wisconsin — where the drinking age was still 21. They flooded across the border every weekend looking to legally drink.
These kids even had a nickname: “border babies.”
Bars near state lines were packed. Highways filled up late at night with young, inexperienced drivers heading back home.
And then came the consequences.
Alcohol-related accidents involving young drivers spiked. Fatal crashes increased. Law enforcement and local communities started sounding the alarm.
It didn’t take long for Michigan to realize this experiment wasn’t going the way they hoped.
So in 1978, the state raised the drinking age to 19 — kind of a halfway compromise.
But even that didn’t last.
By 1984, after federal pressure tied highway funding to drinking age laws, Michigan raised it back to 21, where it remains today.
The Weird Part
Michigan didn’t just change its own laws — it accidentally became the Midwest’s biggest underage party destination for a few chaotic years.
Imagine entire waves of teens crossing state lines every weekend just to legally drink… and then driving home.
Yeah… probably not our finest idea.
Michigan Tie-In
For a short stretch of time, Michigan wasn’t just known for cars and coastlines — it was known as the place where teens from three states went to party legally.
Final Thought
Michigan tried to make a fair, logical decision…
…and ended up hosting one of the most unintended road trip party scenes in Midwest history.
Sometimes “seems like a good idea at the time” really is the warning sign.
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