The great American playwright Arthur Miller graduated from Michigan in 1938. When he returned in 1953, he was dismayed by the massive and unfamiliar new residence halls. “There are buildings now where I remembered lawn and trees,” he wrote. Each cadre of students at Michigan goes through Miller’s experience. Graduates of the 1850s who came back after the Civil War were surprised and a little wistful to find no cows grazing in the Diag. Every alumnus carries a cherished memory of Michigan — then returns in 20 years and realizes their Michigan is hard to find among the new construction of someone else’s Michigan.
— From “The Lost Campus” by James Tobin, presented at the U-M Heritage Project website, celebrating U-M’s 2017 bicentennial