Memory Aids: Lock In the Key Facts
Part of Public Health — GCSE History
This memory aid covers Memory Aids: Lock In the Key Facts within Public Health for GCSE History. Revise Public Health in Medicine Through Time for GCSE History with 10 exam-style questions and 4 flashcards. This topic shows up very often in GCSE exams, so students should be able to explain it clearly, not just recognise the term. It is section 7 of 10 in this topic. Use it for quick recall, then test yourself straight afterwards so the memory aid becomes usable in an answer.
Topic position
Section 7 of 10
Practice
10 questions
Recall
4 flashcards
🧠 Memory Aids: Lock In the Key Facts
The CSSSB mnemonic for the public health story:
- C — Chadwick Complained (1842 Report linked poverty and disease — government ignored it)
- S — Snow Showed (1854 Broad Street pump — proved waterborne transmission)
- S — Stink Shocked (1858 Great Stink — Parliament forced to act)
- S — Sewers Solved (1858–75 Bazalgette built 1,100 miles of sewers under London)
- B — Booth and Rowntree Revealed (1880s–1900s surveys proved scale of poverty → Liberal reforms)
"Snow before Germ" — the crucial timeline order: Students often get confused about when Snow and germ theory happened. Remember it this way: Snow investigated the Broad Street pump in 1854. Pasteur published germ theory in 1861. Snow came seven years BEFORE germ theory. He proved waterborne transmission without understanding germs. The correct sequence is: Snow (evidence-based investigation) → Pasteur/germ theory (scientific explanation) → Koch (specific bacteria identified) → policy change (1875 Act made compulsory).
1848 vs 1875 — the single most testable comparison: Both are "Public Health Acts." The entire difference is one word: 1848 = permissive (could). 1875 = compulsory (must). To remember which is which: think of 1848 as early Victorian, still deep in laissez-faire thinking — councils were given a choice. By 1875, enough had happened (Great Stink, germ theory, Bazalgette's sewers, 1867 Reform Act giving workers the vote) that government could no longer offer councils a choice.
Key dates to know cold (the "GSCHB" sequence):
- 1831 — First cholera epidemic hits Britain (32,000 deaths)
- 1842 — Chadwick's Report (poverty + poor sanitation = disease)
- 1848 — First Public Health Act (permissive — councils COULD act)
- 1854 — Snow and the Broad Street pump (waterborne transmission proved)
- 1858 — Great Stink forces Parliament to fund sewers
- 1861 — Pasteur publishes Germ Theory
- 1875 — Second Public Health Act (compulsory — councils MUST act)
- 1906–14 — Liberal reforms (school meals, pensions, National Insurance)
Visual association — "The Reluctant Government": Picture a Victorian MP sitting in Parliament with a clothes peg on his nose. He is holding a report in one hand (Chadwick, 1842 — ignored) and a map in the other (Snow, 1854 — ignored). Only when the windows behind him are thick with the smell of the Thames does he finally reach for his pen to sign the sewer bill. This is the whole story of 19th-century public health in one image: evidence was not enough — self-interest was what moved government.