Servants of God and Venerables need two miracles to become a saint. Blesseds have already had a miracle documented and accepted; they need one more to be a saint.
The list of Servants of God, Venerables and Blesseds is extensive. To demonstrate this here is a list of the Canadian saints, Blesseds, Venerables and Servants of God.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Canadian_Catholic_saints_and_beatified_people
Servant of God Jeanne le Ber (1662-1714) of Montreal is an example of the unique and dynamic lives these holy people live. She was a recluse and was known as the Angel of Montreal. A beautiful soul and a promoter of Perpetual Eucharistic Adoration.
http://www.biographi.ca/en/bio/le_ber_jeanne_2E.html
Blessed Isidore Bakanja
Belgian Congo
1887 - 1909
A convert to Catholicism, he was often mistaken for a catechist, so great was his fervour in talking about Christ and the Catholic faith. While working on a rubber plantation Bl. Isidore refused the demand of his supervisor to take off his brown scapular. As a result he was flogged, this was the second time he was ordered to be flogged for refusing to remove "Mary’s habit" as it was known in his language. During the beating the supervisor flew into a rage and bet him so severely that he never recovered. After 6 agonising months of pain and infection, Bl. Isidore died from his wounds on 15 August 1909, clothed in the scapular of Our Lady of Mount Carmel.
Quotes: "The white man did not like Christians.... He did not want me to wear the scapular.... He yelled at me when I said my prayers."
"If you see my mother, or if you go to the judge, or if you meet the priest, tell them that I am dying because I am a Christian."
Asked if he would forgive the man who beat him, Isidore replied: "Certainly I shall pray for him. When I am in heaven, I shall pray for him very much".
Blessed Émilie Gamelin
Montreal
1800-1851
Following the deaths of her husband and her three children, Blessed Émilie Gamelin turned to Our Blessed Mother at the foot of the cross, contemplating her sorrow she not only found solace but also the strength to throw herself into a life of charity. She began caring for the poor and the elderly, eventually opening a home for elderly women. Despite the ridicule of her friends, she gave her life to prayer and caring for those in need. Soon she was looking after orphans, the mentally and physically handicapped, poor, and immigrants. Her home became known as 'House of Providence'. Eventually, at the request of her bishop, Blessed Émilie became a religious sister, founding the Sisters of Providence. She died in 1851 after contracting cholera while caring for cholera patients. At the time of her death there were 49 sister and 9 houses in the congregation.
Quotes:
"These crosses that I find so heavy are for me rungs of the ladder to heaven."
Her dying words: "Humility, simplicity, charity".
Servant of God, Fr. Patrick Ryan
Ireland/Tennessee
1845-1978
Fr Patrick Ryan emigrated from Ireland to Tennessee and was ordained a priest in Nashville in 1869. He became the Pastor of St. Peter and Paul's in Chattanooga in July 1872, where he worked fastidiously to promote religious education, engaging the Dominican sisters to establish a school and convent in the city. When the yellow fever epidemic broke out in 1878 Fr. Ryan went from house to house, caring for the sick and administering last rites to the dying, without any care for his own safety. Even when he contracted the deadly disease, he still did not stop bringing Viaticum to the dying. Within 48 hours of his own death, he was still ministering the others in need. Fr. Ryan died on 28 of September 1978
Quotes: "Bury me in Chattanooga among my people".