A shooting sport is
a competitive sport involving tests of proficiency (accuracy and speed) using
various types of guns such
as firearms and airguns. Hunting is
also a shooting sport, and indeed shooting live pheasants was
an Olympic event
(albeit only once, in 1900.The shooting sports are categorized by the type
of firearm, targets, and distances at which the targets are shot.
The National
Rifle Association of the United Kingdom (NRA) was founded in
1860 to raise the funds for an annual national rifle meeting "for the
encouragement of Volunteer Rifle Corps and the promotion of Rifle-shooting
throughout Great Britain"
For similar reasons, concerned over
poor marksmanship during the American Civil War, veteran Union officers Col.
William C. Church and Gen. George Wingate formed the National Rifle Association of America
in 1871 for the purpose of promoting and encouraging rifle shooting on a
"scientific" basis. In 1872, with financial help from New York State,
a site on Long Island, the Creed Farm, was purchased for the purpose of
building a rifle range. Named Creedmoor, the range opened in 1872, and
became the site of the first National Matches until
New York politics forced the NRA to move the matches to Sea Girt, New Jersey. The popularity of
the National Matches soon
forced the event to be moved to its present, much larger location: Camp Perry.
In 1903, the U.S. Congress created the National
Board for the Promotion of Rifle Practice (NBPRP), an advisory
board to the Secretary of the Army, with a nearly identical charter to the NRA.
The NBPRP (now known as the Civilian Marksmanship Program) also
participates in the National Matches at Camp Perry.
In 1903, the NRA began to establish
rifle clubs at all major colleges, universities, and military academies. By
1906, youth programs were in full swing with more than 200 boys competing in the National Matches. Today,
more than one million youth participate in shooting sports events and
affiliated programs through groups such as 4-H, the Boy Scouts of America, theAmerican
Legion, U.S. Jaycees, NCAA, the Scholastic Clay Target Program, National Guard Bureau, ROTC, and JROTC. These programs have
all continued to thrive despite political pressure to disband. The success of
these programs is often attributed to an emphasis on safety and education that
has resulted in an unprecedented scholastic and collegiate athletic safety
record.
French pistol
champion and founder of the modern Olympics, Pierre de Coubertin, participated in many of
these early competitions. This fact certainly contributed to the inclusion of
five shooting events in the 1896 Olympics. Over the years, the events
have been changed a number of times in order to keep up with technology and
social standards. The targets that formerly resembled humans or animals in
their shape and size have are now a circular shape in order to avoid
associating the sport with any form of violence. At the same time, some events
have been dropped and new ones have been added. The 2004 Olympics featured
three shooting disciplines (rifle, pistol, and shotgun) where athletes competed
for 51 medals in 10 men's and 7 women's events—slightly fewer than the previous
Olympic schedule.
The Olympic Games continue to provide
the shooting sports with its greatest public relations opportunity. The sport
has always enjoyed the distinction of awarding the first medals of the Games.
Internationally, the International Shooting Sport
Federation (ISSF) has oversight of all Olympic shooting events
worldwide, while National Governing Bodies (NGBs) administer the sport within
each country.
Having originally established shooting
as an organized sport in the USA, the NRA was the obvious choice to administer
the United States participation in the Olympic Games. The NRA dutifully managed
and financially supported international and conventional shooting sports for
over 100 years until the formation of USA Shooting.
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