The Ramblin’ Raft Race (primarily the one on Atlanta’s Chattahoochee River) was a legendary, massive floating party and rafting event that defined wild 1970s fun in the South. It ran annually from 1969 to 1980 (mostly on the third Saturday in May, around Memorial Day weekend) and grew from a small Georgia Tech fraternity stunt into what Guinness World Records recognized in 1978 as the world’s largest participatory sporting event.
Georgia Tech student Larry Patrick (Delta Sigma Phi fraternity) organized the first “Great Chattahoochee River Raft Race” as a casual social event. It began as a challenge issued on-air to WQXI radio DJs. About 50+ participants and 2,500 spectators showed up for a grueling 34-mile course that took around 30 hours.
The race shortened to a more manageable 9.2-mile course (from below Morgan Falls Dam to Paces Ferry/Vinings area). Corporate sponsors like Coca-Cola and later Anheuser-Busch joined, along with WQXI’s heavy promotion. Creative homemade raft categories encouraged wild entries (e.g., pirate ships, themed contraptions). Attendance exploded: by 1971, thousands of rafts and up to 180,000 spectators; peaks in the mid-to-late 1970s reached tens of thousands of rafters and 300,000–400,000+ total participants/spectators.
It earned nicknames like “Woodstock on the Water” and “The Rose Bowl on the River”—a huge, carefree party with music, beer, creative (and often sinking) rafts made from inner tubes, barrels, lumber, and anything that floated. National media (e.g., CBS with Dan Rather, Newsweek, Sports Illustrated) and even international coverage followed.
The event was as much about the spectacle and debauchery (drinking, music, bikinis, general chaos) as competition. Creative rafts included floating cars, bathtubs, pianos, Civil War battleship replicas, Star Wars-themed builds, and more. Many didn’t finish; “rescues” were common.
It drew people from all walks of life and helped spotlight the Chattahoochee River. Organizers (via the American Rafting Association, which Patrick helped form) emphasized river cleanup and conservation. The race’s popularity contributed to momentum for protecting the river, aiding the creation of the Chattahoochee River National Recreation Area in 1978 under President Jimmy Carter.
However, it also brought challenges: litter, traffic nightmares, public drunkenness, drug use, nudity complaints from riverside property owners, and strain on local resources. Organizers worked hard on logistics (shuttles, parking, Porta-Potties, volunteers including Tech students/engineers), but issues mounted.
The race ended after 1980. WQXI took over that year from the American Rafting Association; a drowning occurred (the only one), and liability/insurance costs soared. The National Park Service pushed back on security/cleanup burdens, leading to cancellation. Similar “Ramblin’ Raft Race” events popped up in other places (e.g., Louisville on the Ohio River, Tampa), inspired by Atlanta’s, but the original was the iconic one.



































