The flag was placed on top of a Guy Fawkes effigy at the apex of a large bonfire at the Thorner Bonfire & Fireworks Festival on the evening of November 3 — a number of outraged spectators opted to desert the display in disgust as a result.
An anonymous woman quoted in local media said attendees could be heard saying "what are they going to do with the flag?" as the Union Jack was unceremoniously hoisted onto the pyre.
"We just watched it burn for a bit and my parents were disgusted. Well, it wasn't burning, more melting with the fabric, and we just turned around and walked out. As we were walking out people were saying 'aren't they taking the flag down it?' It was terrible," she said.
Similar righteous indignation was exhibited by some social media users, who took to Twitter to vent their incendiary ire.
Nonetheless, the event's organizers have stood by their destructive decision.
"[The fallout] has all been dealt with. The Union Jack was damaged and it is perfectly suitable to burn a damaged Union Jack," a spokesperson said.
Contrary to popular myth, it's not illegal to burn the UK's national emblem — and the spokesperson was correct to say cremation is a legitimate means of dispensing with a damaged Union Jack. The British Flag Institute's suggested recipe for dispensing with a flag when it's no longer in a suitable condition for use is for them to be "destroyed in a dignified way", such as being burnt or cut into strips.