Career
The town of Pack"s Mills of which he was also postmaster, was named after him. Pack"s son, George Willis Pack. Grandson, Charles Lathrop Pack.
And great-grandson, Randolph Greene Pack were to follow him in the timber business in Michigan, New York and beyond.
Pack had moved to Michigan from upstate New York, in 1848. After a few years "near Maria"s father, Abram Lathrop, in Madison Clounty.
They then moved twelve miles away to Peterboro", about 25 miles (40 km) east and south of Syracuse. In search of new opportunities, he used proceeds from the sale of a farm near Watertown, New York, to purchase 80 acres (320,000 m2) just outside Lexington, Michigan.
With ten children in tow, George and Maria Pack boarded "an Erie Canal sidewheeler rode it to the end of the line at Buffalo and from there headed up Lake Erie to Lake Huron, disembarking at Lexington, on the eastern shore of the Michigan thumb, overlooking Lake Huron", where they spent the next 13 years.
lieutenant was while in Lexington, that Pack made his first investment in timber. He "paid $1,600 for 720 acres of timberland near the Black River. The acreage was located ten miles north of Lexington, near a town called Farmers, now known as Carsonville".
Pack opened his first sawmill in Washington Township, in 1856.
The second was opened just a year later, in the same township. The town of Pack"s Mills was established nearby.
A grist mill and then a flour mill followed soon thereafter. By 1876, "sixteen hundred acres would be in the Pack name".