ement, the Afro-American Alumni Society established the Paul L. Gaines Scholarship to benefit deserving Rhode Island and Massachusetts minority students majoring in education or counseling at Bridgewater State College. In 1968, the Newport City Council appointed Mr. Gaines to fill an unexpired term on the Newport School Committee. He was then elected to a full term. In 1977, Mr. Gaines became the first African American elected to the Newport City Council since the turn of the century. In September 1981, the councilmembers elected him chairman of the city council and mayor of Newport. He was the first African American mayor in New England. During his tenure, the designs and planning for the Newport Police Station and the Newport Tourism and Convention Center were finalized. Mr. Gaines record of public service included election to the Rhode Island Constitutional Convention in 1985, a three-year term on the Advisory Council of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights; the Rhode Island Ethics Commission (charter member); and the Newport Canvassing Authority (chairman, 1997-2006). In addition, he sat on the Board of Trustees of St. Michaels Country Day School, the Newport Historical Society, and the Newport Public Schools Equity in Education Committee. He also served as Chairman of the Board of Directors for the Newport County Community Mental Health Center; Newport Public Library Board of Trustees; Presidents Advisory Board, U.S. Naval War College, Newport; Co-Chair Advisory Board CCRI-Newport Campus; Life Member, NAACP; Newport Sports Advisory Commission; Newport Hospitality Commission and Newport Hospital Corporation. As chair of the Committee for the Renovation of Patriots Park in Portsmouth, Rhode Island, Mr. Gaines oversaw the construction of a monument for the First Rhode Island Regiment (the Black Regiment) that fought in the Revolutionary War. The monument was dedicated in 2006. Mr. Gaines was inducted into the Newport Sports Hall of Fame in 2002. In 2005, Mr. Gaines delivered the keynote address at the 58th Annual Reading of the George Washington Letter to the Congregation of Touro Synagogue in Newport. In 2006 he received the Living the Dream Award of the Martin Luther King Jr. State Holiday Commission. Mr. Gaines was predeceased by his five siblings: Albert Jr, William, Robert, Margaret and Estelle. He is survived by his wife and four children: Jena Gaines, Patricia Gaines (Michael Dean), Paulajo Gaines (Hon. William White Jr), and Paul Gaines Jr.; two grandsons, Zachary Gaines Mays and Nicolas Gaines Mays; and many nieces, nephews and cousins. Funeral services will be private. A celebration of his life will be held in late summer.