The Broad Street Cholera Investigation
During a severe cholera outbreak in Soho, physician John Snow mapped deaths and interviewed residents about where they obtained water. The concentration of cases among people who used the Broad Street pump supported his argument that cholera spread through contaminated water rather than ‘bad air.’ Local authorities disabled the pump on 8 September.
What existed before
Cholera repeatedly struck rapidly growing nineteenth-century London, where water supplies, cesspits, and sewers could exist dangerously close together. The prevailing miasma theory attributed disease to foul air, while Snow had already argued for waterborne transmission.
Trigger and cause
The neighborhood outbreak accelerated at the end of August 1854. Snow combined the geographic pattern of deaths with interviews and unusual cases—including people who lived farther away but drank Broad Street water—to identify a shared exposure.
Aftermath
The local parish board agreed to remove the pump handle. The outbreak was already declining, so historians caution against treating that single action as the sole reason it ended. Snow continued to develop and publish his evidence.
Why it matters
Broad Street illustrates evidence-led intervention under uncertainty. Its enduring lesson is not a heroic myth about one map or one person, but the value of combining local knowledge, spatial patterns, comparison groups, and a testable theory.
Uncertainty note
Simplified retellings often imply that Snow personally removed the handle and immediately stopped the epidemic. The parish board ordered the intervention, and cases had begun falling. The investigation’s importance rests on the larger body of evidence, not that simplified sequence.