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Clifford Neal Knox | |
|---|---|
| Born | Clifford Neal Knox June 20, 1935 |
| Died | January 17, 2005 (2005-01-18) (aged 69) |
| Nationality | American |
| Other names | Neal Knox |
| Occupation(s) | Writer, editor, and publisher |
| Known for | Gun Rights Activism |
Clifford Neal Knox (June 20, 1935 – January 17, 2005) was a board member and officer of theNational Rifle Association of America (NRA), gun magazine writer and editor,gun rights activist, and prolific author of technical firearms articles and articles related to his interpretation of theSecond Amendment and views on firearms laws.
Born inRush Springs, Oklahoma and raised inTexas, Knox served eight years in theTexas National Guard and attended Abilene Christian College, nowAbilene Christian University, andMidwestern State University in Wichita Falls. He also began what would become a long career as a freelance writer and columnist; he started as a reporter for theVernon Daily Record before he moved on to theTimes Record News in Wichita Falls.
As an independent writer, Knox sold several articles to gun magazines includingGuns & Ammo andGuns magazine between 1964 and 1966. He formally entered the firearms journalism trade in 1966, when he became the founding editor ofGun Week, a weekly newspaper covering firearms issues of the day. The paper gave in-depth coverage to the bill that would eventually become theGun Control Act of 1968. Knox leftGun Week in 1968, when he moved to Wolfe Publishing/as editor ofHandloader Magazine and founding editor ofRifle Magazine.
In 1978, Knox moved toWashington, D.C. in order to lobby against gun control measures and work for the National Rifle Association. He served four years as the executive director of theInstitute for Legislative Action (ILA), the lobbying arm of the NRA. At the ILA, Knox was instrumental in convincing friendly lawmakers to introduce a reform of the 1968 Act. The bill became theFirearm Owners Protection Act, which eventually passed in 1986.
From 1984 to his death, Knox was the chairman of the Firearms Coalition, an organization that he created, which lobbies against restrictive gun laws.
One of the recurring themes throughout Knox's career was his uncompromising stance on gun laws and the2nd Amendment, which he believed recognizes a pre-existing human right to self-defense. His views would lead him into many confrontations with other members of the NRA leadership and Congressional leadership. Knox publicly accused many NRA leaders of being too moderate. In 1977, Knox was among the hardliners who took control of the NRA during theRevolt at Cincinnati.[1]
The same hardliners fired Knox from the NRA five years later in 1982. Over the ensuing decade, Knox used his own columns in magazines popular with NRA members likeShotgun News andGuns & Ammo to get himself and up to 10 allies elected to the NRA board in 1991.[2]
In 1997, a narrowly divided NRA Board voted Knox out of the succession line for president of the NRA, replacing him withCharlton Heston, who was subsequently elected president of the organization.
Knox died in 2005, aged 69, after a year-long struggle withcolon cancer.[3]
His son, Jeff Knox, continues the Knox Report column, which is published inShotgun News (now rebranded asFirearms News) and elsewhere. Another son, Chris Knox, has compiled and edited a collection of his writing,Neal Knox: The Gun Rights War.[4]