Saint Petersburg | Katharine Hepburn | Saint Peter | Saint-Cloud | Saint Joseph | Saint George | Saint | Yves Saint Laurent | Saint-Omer | Saint-Denis | Saint John, New Brunswick | Camille Saint-Saëns | Saint-Germain-en-Laye | saint | Saint Thomas, U.S. Virgin Islands | Saint Louis University | Order of Saint Benedict | Saint Petersburg State University | Saint Paul | Saint Nicholas | The Saint | Saint John | Saint-Étienne | Saint Louis | Saint Lucia | Saint Patrick | Saint-Lô | Saint Lawrence River | Yves Saint Laurent (brand) | Saint-Ouen, Seine-Saint-Denis |
As early as 1915 (in American press reports) and as late as the 1940s (in Nazi broadcasts), she was described as a member of the “famous Drexel family” of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, an apparent reference to the descendants of Francis Martin Drexel (who founded the Drexel & Company banking empire), including his son Anthony Joseph Drexel (who founded Drexel University in Philadelphia) and his granddaughter Saint Katharine Drexel.