Design

Forever 7 Jewelers becomes a living memorial in Montana

A Dillon jeweler renamed its 35-year-old shop Forever 7 for a 7-year-old son killed in a bike accident, turning the store into a place for memory and repair.

Priya Sharma··2 min read
Published
Listen to this article0:00 min
Forever 7 Jewelers becomes a living memorial in Montana
Source: ewscripps.brightspotcdn.com

In Dillon, a 35-year-old jewelry store has been remade into something more intimate than a retail address. Regina and Cameron Haworth renamed their business Forever 7 Jewelers after their son, Enoch Haworth, died in a bicycle accident in September 2025 at age 7, and Cameron Haworth called the new name a “living memorial” that will last a lifetime.

The rebrand came as the family moved the shop to a new location just up the block after the former building owners gave them notice. What might have been a routine relocation became a public act of remembrance, tying the store’s next chapter directly to Enoch’s name. Regina Haworth said the business has also become a place where people stop in to share memories of him, giving the counter a second life as a community gathering point.

That emotional shift lands with particular force in a state where stones already carry a strong sense of place. Forever 7 Jewelers sells diamonds and precious gems, along with Montana sapphires and Yogo sapphires, sourcing stones from vendors in Philipsburg and Idaho. The selection matters. Buyers looking for memorial pieces often want more than a generic pendant or ring; they want a material that can hold a story, whether that means a Montana sapphire with local provenance, a one-of-a-kind setting, or a piece made by hand rather than pulled from a case and forgotten.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

The store also showcases local artisans and makers, reinforcing that sense of personal authorship. The Haworths have said they eventually hope to add casting and repair services, which would make the shop even more useful for families seeking customized remembrance pieces and for customers who want jewelry that can be worn every day, not tucked away. In a region with deep sapphire roots, including the first U.S. sapphire discoveries in 1865 and the discovery of Yogo sapphires in 1895, the store’s pivot feels especially rooted in place.

The response from Dillon and surrounding communities showed how widely Enoch’s death was felt. Local reporting said more than $20,000 was raised for the Haworth family after the accident, a measure of support that now echoes through the store itself. Forever 7 Jewelers is no longer just a neighborhood jeweler; it has become a place where grief, memory, and the daily work of making and wearing jewelry meet.

This article was produced by Prism’s automated news system from verified source data, official records, and press releases, then run through automated quality and moderation checks before publishing. The system is built and supervised by the people who set the standards it runs under. Read our full AI policy.

Know something we missed? Have a correction or additional information?

Submit a Tip

Never miss a story.

Get Everyday Jewelry updates weekly. The top stories delivered to your inbox.

Free forever · Unsubscribe anytime

Discussion

More Everyday Jewelry News

Forever 7 Jewelers becomes a living memorial in Montana | Prism News