Charles William Packe (23 September 1792 â 27 October 1867) was a British Conservative Party politician.
Packe was the oldest son of Charles James Packe and Penelope Dugdale, daughter of Richard Dugdale of Blyth Hall. He was also the brother of Great Northern Railway deputy chairman and Liberal politician George Hussey Packe. He married Kitty Jenkyn Reading, daughter of Thomas Hort, in 1822.
He inherited Prestwold Hall upon his father's death in 1837, and later acquired Glen Hall and an 18-acre estate in southern Leicestershire for ã2,530 in 1837 and, a decade later, Stretton Hall for ã30,000, financed by a mortgage from Sir George Robinson. In 1842, he commissioned William Burn to redesign Prestwold Hall, spending a reported ã70,000 over the next two decades on improvements and further land close to the hall. A decade later, he spent ã12,000 on a house and 745 acres of land at Branksome in Dorset, also using Burn, via a loan of ã7,000.
Packe was also a keen investor in bank stock, government consols, and railway shares, the latter of which he had ã4,050 in during the mid-1840s.
By the time of his death, Packe owned 2,464 acres in Leicestershire, worth ã4,267 gross a year, with a gross personal wealth of ã35,000.
He was elected MP for South Leicestershire at a by-election in 1836 and held the seat until his death in 1867. During this time, he rented a home at Richmond Terrace, just off Whitehall, in London.