Home Artists Posts Import Register

Content

Cholera has foiled John Snow at every turn, but now he has it pinned down at Broad Street... and he won't let it escape again.

Files

England: The Broad Street Pump - III: Map of the Blue Death - Extra History

Support us on Patreon! http://bit.ly/EHPatreon Grab your Extra Credits gear at the store! http://bit.ly/ExtraStore Subscribe for new episodes every Saturday! http://bit.ly/SubToEC --- (Episode details below) Watch the Broad Street Pump series! http://bit.ly/1NRSAsL Play games with us on Extra Play! http://bit.ly/WatchEXP Talk to us on Twitter (@ExtraCreditz): http://bit.ly/ECTweet Follow us on Facebook: http://bit.ly/ECFBPage Get our list of recommended games on Steam: http://bit.ly/ECCurator ____________ John Snow raced to discover the causes of the cholera epidemic that swept Broad Street. He went door-to-door talking to the locals, then surveyed government records for extra clues. He began to craft a map of deaths, and drew the first Voronoi Diagram to assess the victims' proximity to the pump. All but 8 of the 84 victims were closer to the Broad Street Pump (and hence more likely to use it) than any other pump, and most of the remainder had daily commutes that took them past the pump. He also noticed that a local workhouse and a tavern were conspicuously cholera-free despite their proximity to the pump, and found that they had access to their own drinking supplies which unbeknownst to them had kept them safe. With his evidence in hand, he met with the local health commission and convinced them to deactivate the Broad Street Pump. But his theory was still not widely accepted, and after the epidemic passed everything returned to normal. At last, a local pastor named Henry Whitehead set out to debunk the wild theories about what had caused the epidemic in his parish. He doubted Snow's results, but as he investigated, he found more evidence that backed them up. His relationship with the neighborhood also meant he could get information Snow couldn't, and it was thus that he found Patient Zero: a baby who died two days before the epidemic, and whose mother had been throwing her dirty diapers in a cesspit under the house. The government investigated and found that the poorly-built cesspit had begun leaking into the Broad Street Pump's water supply, infecting all who drank from it with cholera passed along in the baby's diapers. It would take many years before John Snow's theory became accepted fact, but his research paved the way for the modern medical field of epidemiology. ____________ Get the intro music here! http://bit.ly/1EQA5N7 *Music by Demetori: http://bit.ly/1AaJG4H Get the outro music here! http://bit.ly/1iYzuEx *Music by Sean and Dean Kiner: http://bit.ly/1LBy9zh

Comments

Anonymous

This was the episode that really made the music feel appropriate. Awesome. However I'm surprised you didn't mention the anecdote of a cholera death in an otherwise clean area, until it was revealed the victim once lived near the Broad Street Pump and had water from it sent to her hecause she liked it. I recall that anecdote being a powerful argument for John Snow.

Anonymous

Well duh *showing the actual water pump* :D The guy on the left side of the committee seems familiar :D You are awesome(ness) :*

Anonymous

This was a great series. One of the better ones since the seminal tragedy. Although My european bias is obviously to be taken into account.

Anonymous

I noticed a certain somebody on the health committee...

Anonymous

It's weird working in the medical industry that we actually thought like this only a hundred or so years ago that disease just sat in the air (they're not wrong there are airborne contagions) but that it took so much for Snow to point out that disease can spread through water. Also, I saw what you did there with the committee.

The Cayute

Another bit of history I'd never really known (combined with a fact of life I've taken for granted) :) I love it when you guys cover relatively obscure bits of history like this, even when I know there's more 'exciting' topics like all 'dem wars :P

Anonymous

Next week is a look at the sanitation developments which removed "The Great Stink" and probably put an end to Choleric London. Then a one-off about a figure in British Medical History.

Anonymous

A very interesting and new (to me) bit of history. What I am surprised at is that Snow never contracted anything himself. Quite often in these types of stories, the doctor fighting the disease runs themselves so ragged that they end up victims of the disease they are fighting or some other malady brought about by the general state of disease.

Anonymous

I must thank you for this. I got home late from the office after hours of paperwork and signatures and careful documentation of my experiments, growing somewhat sick of it. And when I watched this, I just realized how important documentations are, maybe not today or tomorrow but farther in the future. I may not become the next John Snow but if I can be the guy that wrote down the data for someone to use years later to better humanity, I am content enough.

Anonymous

Ye Olde Ghost Map

Anonymous

Why didnt John Snow go to the registrar first?

Anonymous

He did know something Jon Snow!

Anonymous

I was thinking about this too, and my bet is that he didn't get sick because he knew not to drink the water. And importantly, he knew that BEFORE he began his investigation, so he never exposed himself to the disease.

Anonymous

With history as broad (no pun intended, though belatedly enjoyed) as it is, I love productions like Extra History for pointing out the areas I wouldn't have thought to look. Thank you for your hard work!

Anonymous

Does anyone know when tea became the none alcoholic staple drink for England? The boiling of water should have been able to kill the cholera if the people drank nothing but tea and beer.

Douglas Goldstein

The poor probably didn't waste their time, firewood, gas, coal, etc., boiling every cup of water they drank, and September in London is hot--not exactly tea weather. As the "seepage" confirms, cholera only needs one glass of water to infect someone.