Marjorie grew up in her parents' home in Lakewood, New Jersey, where she was educated "under the superintendence of her mother, who with the help of governesses, directed her daughter's training in a way to fit her best for her position in life."[6] She traveled extensively, both in the United States and in Europe and spoke three languages.[6]
Edith Kingdon Drexel (1911–1934), who married Henry Sergeant Cram (1907–1997), son of John Sergeant Cram and Edith Claire Bryce, in 1931.[12] After her early death, Cram married Ruth Vaux, a granddaughter of Richard Vaux.[13]
Marjorie Gould Drexel (1916–1947), who married John Murton Gundry Jr. (1896–1961) in 1935.[10][16][17][18] They divorced in 1945 and she married Axel Julius Danielson (1897–1961) in 1946.
Marjorie was a member of the Regency Club, the Junior League and the Garden Club at Shelter Island where she had a summer home.[21]
Her husband died of a heart attack at their home in Boca Grande on February 25, 1946.[19] Marjorie Drexel, a 64 year old widow, died on November 29, 1955, at 1115 Fifth Avenue, her residence in Manhattan. She outlived her husband and all three of her children.[21]
Descendants
Through his daughter Edith, he was a grandfather of John Sergeant Cram III (1932–2007), who married Lady Jeanne Campbell, the only daughter of Ian Campbell, 11th Duke of Argyll.[22] She had previously been married to American writer Norman Mailer. Lady Jeanne and John had a daughter, Cusi Cram (b. 1967), an actress, a Herrick-prize-winning playwright, and an Emmy-nominated writer for the children's animated television program, Arthur.[23][24]
^"The Goulds Are Going". Time. March 23, 1925. Archived from the original on December 2, 2008. Retrieved August 21, 2007. Of the seven older children by his first marriage — Kingdon, Jay, George Jay Jr., Marjorie, Vivien, Edith, Gloria — three eloped, one married an English nobleman, and one the daughter of a Hawaiian princess.