Early history The 90th Winnipeg Battalion of Rifles were formed on 9 November 1883 under the command of Lieutenant Colonel
William Nassau Kennedy. Within two years of formation, the 90th battalion served in the 1885
North-West Rebellion, fighting at Fish Creek and Batoche. The regimental Latin motto is , which means “named by the enemy in battle”. After the
Battle of Fish Creek, a captured
Métis asked, "The red coats we know, but who are those little black devils?" – infantry of the line wore red tunics, but the Winnipeg soldiers were clad in
rifle green, a shade dark enough to be mistaken for black. From that point on, the 90th Rifles (and later Royal Winnipeg Rifles) became informally nicknamed the "Little Black Devils". Some former members of the 90th Rifles served in South Africa during the
Second Boer War as members of other Canadian units, resulting in the award of the South Africa 1899–1900 battle honour.
The First World War The regiment raised several battalions for the
Canadian Expeditionary Force in the
Great War, the most notable being the
8th Battalion (90th Winnipeg Rifles), CEF, which served in the
2nd Infantry Brigade,
1st Canadian Division. The battalion saw some of the heaviest fighting in World War I, distinguishing itself at battles such as Ypres, the Somme, Vimy, Passchendaele, Amiens, Arras and Cambrai. On 6 June 1964, a commemorative D-Day monument was erected on the beaches at
Courseulles-sur-Mer. In 1978 Prince Charles, The Prince of Wales, became the Colonel-in-Chief of the regiment. Subsequently, a contingent of Rifles attended the wedding of Prince Charles to Lady Diana Spencer on 29 July 1981. In 1983 The Royal Winnipeg Rifles, celebrated a one hundred years of military service to Canada with numerous events and an official postage stamp. The regiment contributed numerous soldiers to overseas deployments in the Balkans and to Canadian operations in Afghanistan. In 2009, the Royal Winnipeg Rifles and the
Queen's Own Cameron Highlanders (both stationed at Minto Armoury) merged into the
Winnipeg Infantry Tactical Group (Wpg Inf Tac Grp, or WITG). Both infantry regiments retained a large majority of their traditions but had a mixed and fully cooperative chain of command with only one commanding officer (CO) for both units. In 2018, the units were disaggregated, now with two separate chains of command and with different roles. The new main role for the Royal Winnipeg Rifles is maintaining the Arctic Response Company Group. == Structure ==