John Pack


John Pack was a member of the Council of Fifty and a missionary in the early days of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

Biography

Pack was born in Saint John, New Brunswick. He married his first wife, Julia Ives, in 1832 in Watertown, New York. In 1836, Pack was baptized a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
Pack moved to Kirtland, Ohio, then to Missouri, and then to Nauvoo, Illinois. He was a member of the Nauvoo Legion holding the rank of Captain. Pack also served as a policeman in Nauvoo. In addition Pack was one of the four music wardens 9f Nauvoo University working under the department head, Gustavus Hill. The program was a broad one and Pack instructed in instrumental music along with Titus Billings while Benjamin Wilder and Stephen Goddard were over vocal music department and directed the community choir.
Pack was in the first company of Mormon pioneers to cross the plains with Brigham Young. He held the ranks of Captain of Fifty in the company as well as Colonel in its military organization. At the time of Joseph Smith's death, Pack was serving as a missionary in New Jersey with Ezra T. Benson.
The University of Deseret, the predecessor of the University of Utah, began in the home of John Pack.
Pack served with John Taylor as one of the first Mormon missionaries in France beginning in 1849. Pack was in this mission until 1852, but he spent most of his time preaching in the Channel Islands.
In 1860, Pack and his eldest son, Ward E. Pack, built the first sawmill in Kamas, Utah Territory.

Wives of John Pack

Ward Eaton Pack, one of Pack's sons, twice served as president of the Hawaiian Mission of the LDS Church. He also served in the presidency of the Cache Stake, which covered all of Cache County, Utah and into Wyoming at the time. Ward Eaton's daughter, Grace, married Charles A. Callis, who was later a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles.
Another one of John Pack's sons, Frederick J. Pack, was a prominent professor at the University of Utah.
F. Burton Howard, an emeritus General Authority of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, is a descendant of John Pack and Mary Jane Walker, through their daughter Hattie Pack and grandson Fred Pack Howard.

The John Pack Family Association

The John Pack Family Association holds yearly John Pack descendant family reunions, typically at This Is the Place Heritage Park near the end of the summer. They also contributed to build a replica of the John Pack home at This Is the Place Heritage Park.