Said to have been escaping religious persecution as a Jew in Russian-dominated Poland, Max (called “Mox”) Idelman in October 1867 at Hamburg, Germany, boarded the Steamer Tripoli, shown below, not knowing what he might discover in America. A sense of adventure eventually took him West where Idelman found prosperity and acclaim in Cheyenne, Wyoming, all the while selling whiskey.
Like many refugees Idelman’s beginnings are sketchy. For his birthplace he listed several locations. One of them, Mariampol, is the name of at least eight Polish towns. His date of birth also was variously given. If we go by the date on his tombstone he was born in 1844. That would make him 23 years old at the time of his crossing.

By the time he left Poland, Max had married and in 1863 fathered a son, Samuel. The identity of his wife is shrouded in history. By one account she died; in another she disliked living in America and went back to Poland, leaving Sam with Max. In the 1880 Census he referred to himself as a “widower” and was raising his 13-year-old son.
In 1875, after some eight years serving as a clerk in a St. Joseph liquor emporium, Idelman headed west to Evanston, Wyoming, a town that had its origins when the first Continental Railroad arrived in November 1868 and made Evanston, its headquarters. Idelman saw opportunity there at one of the western-most points in Wyoming and opened a liquor store.




In addition to its Wyoming customer base the company sold liquor in neighboring Colorado and Nebraska. In the process Max was amassing a fortune. His life changed in 1881 when he married again, a woman that he had met in St. Joseph years earlier. She was Fanny Kaufmann, eighteen years his junior, who has been described as “beautiful and cultured” and a gracious hostess. They would have one daughter, Belle, born in 1883. A family photo shows the trio.

Idelman’s success did not go unnoticed in Cheyenne. Considered among the leading businessmen of the town, he was urged to run for local office, agreed, and was elected to a term on the Cheyenne City Council. He was welcomed into the fraternity of Masons and the Knights of Pythias. In his obituary, the Cheyenne Daily Leader wrote: “Mr. Idelman gave liberally to all public benefactions and took an active part in all movements to uphold the city.”
In 1897 the Idelman family knew sorrow. Max’s brother Abe had worked shoulder to shoulder with him in Cheyenne, helping to supervised the construction of the Idelman Building and developing their liquor house into one of the largest in the West. While still a young man of 41 years Abe developed a serious illness and was taken to Denver for treatment, but died there. Like Max he had achieved a reputation in Cheyenne as a public spirited and enterprising citizen. The Cheyenne Daily Sun-Leader announcing Abe’s death headlined: “Was One of the Pillars of Enterprise of the State and City— His Sudden Demise a Severe Shock to the Entire Community.”
The trauma caused Max and other relatives by Abe’s death was compounded by the rift it caused inside the family. The brother, who had never married, left his estate, equivalent to over $1 million today, to Max. A sister and other relatives through their attorneys contested the will, resulting in a rift within the Idelmans.
Max continued to operate Idelman Bros. enterprises, assisted by his son, Samuel. Accounted a “pioneer businessman” in Cheyenne, he died in March 1913 and was buried in the Mount Sinai Jewish Cemetery in grave adjacent to Abe’s. Their monuments are above, Max’s on the right. Fanny continued to live in their mansion home until 1916 when she moved to New York to live with her daughter. When she died in 1937, her body was brought back to Cheyenne where she is interred next to Max.
Both the Idelman Building and mansion remain standing in Cheyenne to remind the populace of this extraordinary family. Shown here, the building has been stripped of much of its original ornamentation but appropriately houses a drinking establishment on the ground floor. The house was sold to a funeral director who modified it with an utilitarian addition to the front. The building later housed the offices of Wyoming’s governor while his quarters were renovated. A movement has begun in Cheyenne to remove the addition and restore the Idelman mansion — the only remaining reminder of Cattle Baron Row — to its former glory.

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