I can find no reference to any saint named William Way.
There is no such thing as becoming a saint in a fictional way.
St. Patrick did not aspire to become a saint. He simply tried to do the will of God in the best way possible and that led to him being declared a saint.
Saint Isidore of Seville was not officially canonized as a saint in the same way as later saints. He was recognized as a Doctor of the Church in the late 7th century for his contributions to theology and education. He is now generally regarded as a saint by popular acclaim and tradition.
St. Therese of Liseaux is called the Saint of the Little Way.
It's the other way around; San Diego is named after a saint. This saint is the Spanish saint Saint Didacus (commonly referred to as Saint Diego). In fact, San Diego is Spanish for Saint Diego.
Saint Lucy.
Saint Alkmund's Way Footbridge was created in 2007.
We can assume that Saint George was born in the normal human way.
saint amslems all the way
Try Saint George, who is a saint to both Moslems and Christians. He was born in the Near East, by the way.
Saint Brigid was an Irish saint, from county Kildare in Ireland. She is the patroness of Ireland, in the same way that Saint Patrick is the patron saint. Her feast date is the 1st of February.
To be beatified (the first step on the way to becoming a saint) you have to perform one miracle. To become a saint you have to perform another miracle. Long after Mary MacKillop's death she cured a women of leukemia and later cured another women of inoperable brain cancer.