Another victim of the Westgate slum clearance scheme was this legendary bit of old Keighley, Quebec Bridge over the North Beck, demolished in 1934.

For generations in the popular mind it had symbolised the focus of an area renowned for “free fights” and “Irish rows”.

The ‘Keighley News’ of the time poignantly described the moment of its demise: “To the very last it resisted the efforts of the demolishers. A chain was passed round it, and when the lifting operation began the bridge lifted bodily and hung in the air for several seconds before collapsing a heap of stones into the North Beck, whose narrow banks it had spanned for years.”