If you’ve had the fortune of travelling for leisure, you know that
there are three types of mementoes that unfailingly elicit pangs of
nostalgia. The first are photographs. The second are the running
commentaries we write down in journals and blogs, documenting the
various impressions, thoughts, and minutiae we experience. The third are
passports. When brimming with exit stamps and tattered visas, passports
are the mark of a worldly traveller: a grimy, well-worn sign to fellow
hostel guests that you’re wanted company when the time comes to compare
stories.
Today, we bring you several passport scans from a number of the 20th century’s best-known cultural figures. Above, you can see a travel document belonging to Virginia Woolf, who received a 1923 stamp from the Foreign Office. Below we have John Lennon’s entry card into the U.S., which the Beatle received after a battle for permanent residency that lasted for several years. Then Marilyn Monroe’s Department of Defense-issued ID card, under the name of Norma Jean DiMaggio. Further down are the passport photos of writers James Joyce and F. Scott Fitzgerald,
accompanied by their respective families, who were travelling under the
same documents. Lastly, we present to you the most impressively
decorated passport pages of all, belonging to Ella Fitzgerald:
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