It is possible that this is true and most documents and articles simply state "The NRA was granted its charter in 1871..." as a convenient shorthand - in the same way the British "National Smallbore Rifle Association" (NSRA) counts 1901 as its founding year, even though technically that was the "Society of Working Men's Rifle Clubs" and we didn't get to "NSRA" until 1947 (after a merger and a period as the "Society of Miniature Rifle Clubs"). It's the same organisation, just renamed.
However, I can't find any source for this statement. The NRA article on the English-language Wikipedia does not make this claim nor does the NRA website (although again, a "Brief" history might skip over such details). I suspect its a lost-in-translation error that has been made in one article, and then other articles have perpetuated it (e.g. someone translating the German to Spanish or something and faithfully repeating the statement without citation).
Anyway, does anyone state-side know if this is true or have a source one way or the other?
Thanks,
Hemmers
EDIT: The French Wikipedia offers a citation, on page 70 of "US Civil-Military Relations After 9/11" :
Of course this source is technically incomplete/incorrect since there is no American entity called the "National Rifle Association" - it's legally registered in New York (for the time being!) as the National Rifle Association of America, which again comes back to that thorny issue of historical shorthand and abbreviations. I'd be interested to know where the author might have got the idea of the ARA in the first place though.A prominent member of the GAR, John A. Logan, helped to institute Memorial Day in 1867, and other Union generals established the American Rifle Association - later renamed the National Rifle Association (NRA) - in 1871. Presidents of the NRA included Ulysses grant.... continues