Chloe Kinderman is an MPhil candidate in the History of Science, Medicine, and Technology. Her research utilizes a historical memory approach to explore how the history of enslavement and the practice of graverobbing have affected the relationship between communities and American hospitals and medical schools in the Southeastern United States from the end of the Civil War to the mid-twentieth century. Previously, Chloe worked in Washington, D.C., in primary healthcare and plans to pursue medicine and the humanities as a physician-historian. Chloe received her BA in History from the College of William & Mary, where she was elected to Phi Beta Kappa and presented with the William Elbert Fraley Award for her honors thesis, “Most Catholic Spain’: British Evangelical Protestant Views of the Spanish Civil War and its Legacy.” Her undergraduate studies were supported by the 1693 Scholars Program and the Stamps Scholars Program.