He died in 1684, whereupon she registered a silver mark of her own;[2] the actual date of its registration is unrecorded.
[3] It seems likely that she employed craftsmen in the continuation of the family business; even so, all of the pieces produced by her workshop bore her own personal stamp.
[2] She and her husband are buried in the south aisle of the Church of St Andrew.
[1] A William III oval tobacco box of c. 1695 bearing Haselwood's hallmark is owned by the National Museum of Women in the Arts.
[3] A beaker from the workshop is part of the Royal Collection, having been given to Elizabeth II in 1968.