
audiobook
by George Wood Wingate, Ammon B. Critchfield, National Board for the Promotion of Rifle Practice
A REPORT ON THE FEASIBILITY AND ADVISABILITY OF SOME POLICY TO INAUGURATE A SYSTEM OF RIFLE PRACTICE THROUGHOUT THE PUBLIC SCHOOLS OF THE COUNTRY
This concise historical report opens a window onto an early‑20th‑century debate over whether American public schools should teach rifle shooting. Framed by a 1906 board meeting of the National Board for the Promotion of Rifle Practice, the document records the work of three senior military officers tasked with assessing the idea’s practicality and merit. Their introduction sets the scene: a nation still wrestling with how best to prepare its youth for potential service, while balancing educational autonomy and public sentiment.
The authors turn to New York’s public‑school experiment, where a modest shooting program has already shown promising results among boys over thirteen. They detail the sheer scale of the city’s system—hundreds of schools and tens of thousands of students—and argue that any broader rollout must rely on voluntary cooperation from local educators. The report’s measured tone and data‑rich analysis make it a fascinating glimpse into the era’s civic and military intersect. Listeners will come away with a deeper understanding of how early policymakers grappled with the balance between civic duty and classroom priorities.
Language
en
Duration
~22 minutes (21K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
Release date
2008-05-31
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1840–1928
A Civil War veteran, lawyer, and tireless advocate for public marksmanship, he helped shape organized rifle practice in the United States and later became a leading figure in the early National Rifle Association.
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1863–1942
A soldier, newspaper editor, and public advocate for marksmanship, he wrote about rifle practice as a matter of training and civic discipline. His best-known published work reflects the practical, reform-minded spirit that also shaped his military career.
View all booksA now-historical U.S. government board, it helped shape early civilian marksmanship programs in the United States. It is best remembered as the predecessor to today’s Civilian Marksmanship Program.
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