Eliza Lynore Banchoff Grover
Adored and admired by family, friends, and across many communities
On Saturday afternoon October 7, 2023, Eliza Grover was walking home on a sidewalk near an elementary school in Towson, Maryland, when she was fatally hit by a drunk driver whose truck jumped the curb. Her death continues to generate tremendous waves of grief across her many communities.
Eliza was born in San Francisco on July 27, 1999. Her family moved to Menlo Park two months after her twin sisters Natalie and Mariah were born in November 2001. Eliza graduated from Menlo-Atherton High School in 2017 and attended Brown University, graduating in 2021 with a BS in Cognitive Neuroscience. After a couple of blissful post-college years in Seattle, Eliza decided to pursue a career in medicine and had moved to Maryland to complete her pre-medical requirements in an intensive program at Goucher College.
You can read more Eliza’s life and accomplishments and watch a recording of her memorial service at the bottom of this page.
Eliza was a devoted daughter, sister, and friend, who openly and fully adored the people who were lucky enough to be part of her life. Through shared adventures, laughing fits, consistent phone calls, and beautiful letters, she prioritized and nurtured her relationships.
To know Eliza was to know how much she loved her family. Her parents and younger sisters were the center of her life, and she adored talking about and inviting people to be with her family whenever she could. She shared a deep bond with her sisters Natalie and Mariah, always finding ways to include them in her life, conversations, adventures, and friendships. She was immensely proud of their accomplishments and the women they have grown up to be.
Eliza was fiercely competitive, yet inclusive and warm, building community everywhere she went. She always made sure the people in her life felt listened to, supported, and, at times, humbled. There was nobody you wanted to have on your team more than Eliza.
Eliza Lynore Banchoff Grover
July 27, 1999 - October 7, 2023
On Saturday afternoon October 7, 2023, Eliza Grover was walking home on a sidewalk near an elementary school in Towson, Maryland, when she was fatally hit by a drunk driver whose truck jumped the curb. Her death continues to generate tremendous waves of grief across her many communities.
Eliza was born in San Francisco on July 27, 1999. The family moved to Menlo Park two months after her twin sisters Natalie and Mariah were born in November 2001. Eliza attended Oak Knoll Elementary School, Hillview Middle School, and Menlo-Atherton High School, graduating in 2017.
In seventh grade, she spent the year in Oaxaca, Mexico with her family, experiencing a local school and a completely different life. She made friends, was recruited into every sports team the small school offered, and developed a love of the Spanish language and Latin American cultures that she cultivated for the rest of her life. Years later, she wrote her college essays about the ways that year had transformed her sense of herself and of the world.
Eliza loved sports and being part of a team. After tumbling at Burgess and swimming with PASA, she played soccer and basketball before settling into an enduring love of volleyball. Over the years, she played at numerous South Bay clubs, most recently Red Rock, where she also coached younger players. At Menlo-Atherton High School, she joined the school’s first freshman team before jumping up to play Varsity for the next three years. The team won two Northern California Division 1 championships and competed in back-to-back State Championships. In her senior year, she was the team’s captain and the league’s co-MVP.
Eliza and her sisters grew up with a deep connection to the Sierra Nevada. The family spent many dreamy summer weeks on Fallen Leaf Lake and later made a home in Serene Lakes, where they continue to gather. An intrepid outdoorswoman, Eliza loved downhill and cross-country skiing, hiking, backpacking, and swimming in mountain lakes. Her last backpacking trip was in August 2023, when she spent a week on the Tahoe Rim Trail with family and friends.
Eliza attended Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island, and graduated in 2021 with a BS in Cognitive Neuroscience. While at Brown she was a research assistant at the Bradley Sleep Laboratory and an associate member of the Sigma Xi Scientific Research Society. During the summers, she worked as an intern at Grail, Inc. and as a research assistant at the Stanford Concussion and Brain Performance Center, where she contributed to a published paper on concussion in girls. She also returned to Oaxaca with Child Family Health International to study health equity and gain experience in community health centers and hospitals.
While at Brown, Eliza played Division 1 NCAA volleyball as a right-side hitter for the Bears. She was a steady force on the team, earning Academic All-Ivy and Academic All-District honors as well as All-Ivy Honorable Mention twice. She loved the team and the competition, but when COVID canceled her senior season, she took it in stride and signed up to earn her EMT and Wilderness First Aid certifications and work in a low-income clinic in Providence. She also found her love for running and completed the first of many half-marathons.
Upon graduation, Eliza spent a summer leading outdoor trips for Overland Adventures and then moved to Seattle, a city that had always had a powerful gravitational pull for her. It quickly became her beloved home. With her close friends and an ever-growing, cherished social circle, Eliza took every chance she could to be outside, exploring the city, adventuring in Washington’s wilderness, and watching sunsets over Puget Sound, sometimes punctuating the beauty with a polar plunge. She played adult-league volleyball and board games, had dinner parties, danced with her friends at concerts, and made everyone she knew join Goodreads.
Having arrived in Seattle without a job, Eliza found her place at the Rainier Clinical Research Center, initially as a Research Assistant and then as a Clinical Research Coordinator, helping to implement medical device clinical trials for people with diabetes. She relished the opportunity to come to know the patients and to learn from physicians. In her own words, the job “cemented her passion for the research process and its potential for population-level impact.” Never a fashion icon, she also really liked wearing scrubs. With inspiring clarity, she decided that she wanted to become a doctor and applied for post-baccalaureate programs to complete the requirements for medical school.
In May 2023, Eliza began a year of intensive study at Goucher College in Towson, Maryland. She was the only one in her cohort who took all of her notes by hand, her signature chicken-scratch handwriting sprawled in fat notebooks. Eliza made friends within the program and sought other connections, practicing with and helping to coach the undergraduate volleyball team, and volunteering with local not-for-profits.
And she ran, more and more, and always joyfully. She was training for the Marine Corps Marathon at the end of October, and had started to talk about trail running and ultramarathons. While she ran, she often listened to running podcasts. She admitted that this was weird. She was just unabashedly fascinated and enchanted by the experience of being in her body for all of those miles. On the morning of her death, she ran 10 miles and then, in the afternoon, took that final walk.
Service of Remembrance & Celebration of Life
October 30, 2023 * Stanford Memorial Church