7 things you probably didn’t know about the NRA

President Donald Trump at the 2016 National Rifle Association's NRA-ILA Leadership Forum during the NRA Convention at the Kentucky Exposition Center.

This story has been updated.

The National Rifle Association is one of the most powerful political advocacy groups and has been at the center of one of the world's most controversial issues: gun control in America.

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The group is making headlines lately as student survivors of the Parkland, Florida, school shooting that claimed 17 lives face demand a change to gun policies from Washington and the NRA.

On Wednesday, students and parents from Stoneman Douglas High School confronted NRA spokeswoman Dana Loesch who said the organization believes the system for buying firearms is flawed and people who shouldn't be able to purchase guns are getting their hands on them.

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People all over the country have participated in sit-ins, walkouts and other demonstrations in solidarity with survivors of the Feb. 14 massacre.

Here are 7 things to know about the NRA:

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Credit: Mark Wilson

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Credit: Mark Wilson

How, when and why did the NRA originate?

It all began with a magazine editorial and had nothing to do with civil rights advocacy.

In 1871, former Union Army officer Col. William C. Church published a call for a training organization after he and his fellow officers became frustrated with the Northern soldiers' poor weapons skills, Time reported.

In the article, published in an August 1871 issue of the “Army and Navy Journal,” Church pointed to the success of Britain’s rifle association, the WInbledon riflery tournament range.

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“The prosperity of [the British] association should be an incentive for the immediate formation of one of a similar character in this country,” Church wrote. “Let us have our rifle practice association, also a Wimbledon on American principles.”

The organization was officially granted a charter by the state of New York on Nov. 17, 1871.

The NRA actually has a history of supporting gun control efforts.

According to the Washington Post, the NRA backed the National Firearms Act in 1934 as well as the Federal Firearms Act of 1936, both of which established a system to license gun dealers and impose stiff taxes on private automatic weapon owners.

This was a time when prominent gangsters, such as Al Capone, George “Baby Face” Nelson and George “Machine Gun” Kelly were active in the U.S.

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Following the 1963 assassination of President John F. Kennedy by Lee Harvey Oswald, who purchased the killing weapon from a mail-order ad in the NRA's American Rifleman magazine, NRA vice president Franklin Orth wanted to ban mail-order rifle sales, the Post reported.

“We do not think that any sane American, who calls himself an American, can object to placing into this bill the instrument which killed the president of the United States,” he said.

What does the NRA represent today?

Today, the NRA is a powerful political advocate for gun rights and formidable opponent of gun control laws. The organization continues to teach firearm safety and holds several instructional programs.

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What do Americans think about the NRA’s political influence?

According to a 2017 Pew Research Center poll, 3-in-10 U.S. adults said they currently own a gun 19 percent of that group reported that they belong to the NRA.

“The public is divided when it comes to the amount of influence the NRA has over guns laws in the U.S.,” the report states. While 44 percent of all U.S. adults said the NRA has too much influence over gun legislation, 40 percent said the organization has the right amount of influence. Only 15 percent said the NRA has too little influence.

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American NRA members specifically are “largely satisfied with the amount of influence the organization has over U.S. gun laws.”

About 63 percent said the NRA has the right amount of influence and 28 percent say it has too little influence. Only nine percent of NRA members reported that the organization has too much influence over gun laws.

Fifty percent of non-gun owners viewed the NRA as too influential.

Read the full Pew Research report here.

NRA membership: Cost, famous members

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In addition to former presidents Ronald Reagan, John F. Kennedy and Richard Nixon, some celebrity members include Chuck Norris, Ted Nugent, Whoopi Goldberg and Karl Malone.

According to the NRA website, yearly membership costs $35 per year; lifetime membership, $1,000. The NRA also offers discounts for seniors and disabled veterans and sells associate membership with limited benefits for $10 per year.

As of May 2013, NRA executive vice president Wayne LaPierre said membership exceeded 5 million people.

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Where is the main office located?

The NRA headquarters is located in Fairfax, Virginia and houses a 15-lane shooting range with distances up to 50 yards, according to the NRA website.

What is the NRA convention?

The NRA convention, officially called the NRA Annual Meetings and Exhibits, is the organization's biggest annual event and features seminars, workshops, celebrity guests and special events.

The 2018 event will be held from May 4-6 in Dallas, Texas. However, Dallas mayor pro tem Dwaine Caraway, a gun owner who told Fox News he believes in the Second Amendment, but wants the NRA to work with leaders to increase gun safety, told the NRA to consider finding another host city for the 147th NRA Annual Meetings and Exhibits.

Caraway told ABCNews that he is "putting all citizens first" with his request to the NRA to reconsider and warned the NRA the group would be met with marches and demonstrations in Dallas.

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