Imperial Valley Press

Utah billionair­e Jon Huntsman remembered as kind, devoted

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SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — Utah billionair­e and philanthro­pist Jon Huntsman Sr. was remembered Saturday inside a basketball arena bearing his name as a generous and kind man devoted to his faith, family and community.

The elder Huntsman was the founder and longtime executive chairman of Huntsman Corp., an $11 billion company that refines raw materials that go into thousands of products. He and his family have given away more than $1.4 billion, including donations to a Salt Lake City cancer institute named for him. Huntsman died Feb. 2 at age 80.

Peter Huntsman, current president and CEO of Huntsman Corp., said his father always placed family, faith and charity ahead of business.

“His business success was nothing more than a means to an end,” the son said, wiping away tears.

Seven of Huntsman’s children spoke during the service inside the University of Utah arena renamed in his honor 30 years ago. Nearly half of the lower bowl seats of the arena were filled.

“To the end, he remained upbeat and positive — his two favorite character traits,” said son Jon Huntsman Jr., the U.S. ambassador to Russia and formerly a Utah governor, presidenti­al candidate and ambassador to China and Singapore. “He lived a full, bold American life.”

A committed member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Huntsman served in several high-level leadership positions with the faith and had close friendship­s with the past five church presidents.

M. Russell Ballard, a member of a top-governing council called the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, said Huntsman’s scriptures were battered and falling apart but that he declined an offer of a replacemen­t because he had marked up the ones he had.

Huntsman Sr. was born in 1937 in Blackfoot, Idaho, and later moved to California, where he met his wife Karen while in junior high school.

The couple later moved to Salt Lake City in the 1970s where they raised nine children, many of whom became involved in the family business. Huntsman is survived by his wife and eight children. One daughter, Kathleen Ann Huntsman, died in 2010 at age 44 after struggling for years with an eating disorder.

In 1970, Huntsman founded the Huntsman Container Corp., which focused on food packaging and pioneered the clamshell container used for McDonald’s Corp.’s Big Mac hamburger.

 ?? AP PHOTO/JEFFREY D. ALLRED/THE DESERET NEWS ?? Karen Huntsman, wife of Jon M. Huntsman, cries during his funeral at the Huntsman Center in Salt Lake City on Saturday.
AP PHOTO/JEFFREY D. ALLRED/THE DESERET NEWS Karen Huntsman, wife of Jon M. Huntsman, cries during his funeral at the Huntsman Center in Salt Lake City on Saturday.

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