I began my duck and pheasant hunting with a .410 side by side double barrel shotgun when I was seven years old (1933) and, has been mentioned, that required precise shooting and range recognition, so that, later in life, I could shoot skeet acceptably well to not embarrass myself in my Navy service. We had a good number of both ducks and pheasants in the Sandhills of western Nebraska.
At that age, I was also given a .410 pistol by one of my dad's friends - only to find the following year the ATF, in their wisdom, felt that single shot no choke .410 pistol with a 12" barrel and only chamdered for a 2 1/2 inch shell - was in the same class of dangerous weapons such as the Thompson Submachine Gun requiring registration under the NFA - with $200 1934 dollars regisstration fee - a lot of money then.
It is the most expensive gift I've ever received and I had to list a reason for having such a "weapon" - I said I was a "gun collector" - I was almost eight years old!
Interestingly enough, even though it has been reclassified as a "curio & relic", the BATFE, in all their wisdom, refuses to remove that gun from the prohibited list. Not only that - there is no legal way to register it today and if you are caught possessing an unregistered one, the fine is $10,000. Interesting, since there are ways to register other NFA guns such as the "Tommy Gun" - expensive, but possible.
