Max Ross

b. 3 August 1927, d. 20 September 2006
  • Max Ross was born on 3 August 1927 in New York.
  • Max Ross was admitted to the Home for Hebrew Infants on 14 October 1927, at age 2 months, by court order, and discharged 4 August 1930, at age 3, to the Hebrew Sheltering Guardian Society.
  • Max Ross appeared in the US federal census of 1 April 1940 in Bronx, New York, at the Home for Hebrew Infants, West Kingsbridge Road.
  • The following appeared on 6 October 1989 in the Sarasota Herald-Tribune: Lynn Ross Wood, 66, formerly of Sarasota, died Oct. 2, 1989, in Washington, D.C.
         She was born in New York and came to this area 12 years ago. She was a deputy director of personnel in the White House during President Reagan's first term and had worked for Reagan when he was governor of California.
         Wood attended Los Angeles City College and the University of California at Los Angeles.
         In 1972, she worked for Californians For Lower Taxes. At the end of 1973, she went to work as an administrative assistant to Gov. Reagan in Sacramento and remained there until 1975.
         Wood began working for Reagan's presidential campaign in 1979 and alter was active in the Reagan for president organization in Sarasota. In 1980, she returned to Arlington, Va., to work for the Reagan-Bush campaign as assistant to the campaign treasurer. She was a member of the transition team after the election and then went to the White House to work in personnel. There she was the assistant to Helene von Damm who later became ambassador to Austria.
         She was a delegate to the United Nations Conference on the Status of Women, held in Vienna in 1984. She also was co-chairman of the Reagan-Bush Reunion for several years.
         In 1985, Wood was named executive director of the National Advisory Council on Adult Education at the Department of Education and in 1988 was named special assistant to the chief of staff at the Veterans Administration.
         She was a member of the Republican Women's Federal Forum, Executive Women in Government, the Renaissance Women and the Friends of the Kennedy Center.
         Survivors include a sister, Connie Rothman of Scottsdale, Ariz; and four brothers, Alexander Ross of North Hollywood, Calif., Ernest Ross of Honolulu, Lee Ross of Northport, Calif., and Max Ross of Greenville, R.I.
         Services and burial are in Arlington. Devol Funeral Home in Washington, D.C., is in charge.
         Memorial donations may be made to the American Cancer Society, 1825 Connecticut Ave. NW, Washington, D.C. 20009 or to the School of Veterinary Medicine, University of California at Davis, Calif. 95616.
  • Max Ross died on 20 September 2006 at age 79 in Pascoag, Providence County, Rhode Island, at Zambarano Hospital.
  • He was interred at Highland Memorial Park, Johnson, Providence County, Rhode Island.
  • The following appeared on 26 September 2006 in the Providence Journal: Max Ross, 79, formerly of Farnum Pike, a self-employed handyman until retiring, died Wednesday, September 20, 2006 at Zambarano Hospital in Pascoag.
         Born in New York, he was a son of the late George and Mary (Mendellson) Ross. He lived in Smithfield for many years until moving to Burrillville.
         He is survived by his brothers, Ernest and Lee Ross of California and a sister, Charlotte R. Rothman of Arizona. He was the brother of the late Alex and Lynn Ross.
         Funeral private.
  • Last Edited: 4 Sep 2015