Packard realised the importance of Nesbit's work and also
Professor J.S. Henslow's recognition in 1843 that the so-called "
Coprolites" at the basement bed of the
Pleistocene Red Crag Formation of Suffolk were rich in
phosphates. He moved his works to Ipswich in 1849. He built up the E. Packard & Co. business in artificial fertilisers at
Bramford near
Ipswich, Suffolk. As the honorific President of
Ipswich Museum, worked to shape that institution into a resource for scientific education. Commencing experimental workings at
Snape in 1843, and entering contracts for supply of the raw materials (freighted by barges and lighters), Packard set up his first factory in Ipswich in an old flour-mill on the Orwell quay in 1847. This was used as a coprolite warehouse after he relocated the processing works to Bramford (by 1854), as rail freight became available and the sulphurous fumes from the works demanded more rural location. Such was his success that the elder Packard (nicknamed 'The Coprolite King' or, more informally, 'the Golden Muck-Man of Ipswich') served as Mayor of the Borough in 1868. Edward Packard, senior, retired about 1889, and his business was the run by his sons
Edward Packard, junior, and Henry Wood Packard. ==Civic involvement and the advancement of science==