Hvidsten Group


The Hvidsten Group was a Danish resistance group during World War II named after the Hvidsten Inn between Randers and Mariager in Jutland where it was formed.

History

The Hvidsten Group became connected to the resistance movement through Ole Giesler, a captain of the Special Operations Executive who helped organise British weapons drops for the Danish Resistance. Marius Fiil, owner of the Hvidsten Inn and leader of the Hvidsten Group, met with Giesler on March 12, 1943 following an SOE drop the night before on Trinderup Heath east of Mariager that had delivered 12-14 containers of explosives and weapons to supply the resistance in Jutland. That evening, Fils, with the help of his neighbour Andreas Stenz, retrieved the weapons and eventually brought them to Mustard Point, which was chosen by the Hvidsten Group as a receiving site and became one of its most reliable during the resistance effort.
The Hvidsten Group received many drops during the resistance signalled via "greetings" at the end of the BBC news broadcasts with the encoded message "Greetings to Elias - Listen again" and delivered via British Halifax planes. The Hvidsten group was responsible for pick-up at Allestrupgårds Heath and delivery of explosives to resistance groups like BOPA and Holger Danske to be used for sabotage of railways, locomotive sheds, bridges and factories in use by the German occupation forces.
, Copenhagen, July 1944

Dismantlement of group

The activities of the Hvidsten Group and several other resistance groups were revealed to the Gestapo by Jacob Jensen, a British Army paratrooper employed by the Special Operations Executive, after he was captured on 13 December 1943 in Aarhus and interrogated under torture. On March 11, 1944, in the early morning, the Gestapo surrounded the Hvidsten Inn and the majority of the group were arrested. Their arrest was reported by the resistance newspaper De frie Danske on 18 March 1944.
The following month De frie Danske reported that several arrestees from Hvidsten, including Marius Fiil, had been transferred from Randers to the Vestre Fængsel prison.
Eight of its members were sentenced to death on June 26 and executed by firing squad in Ryvangen on June 29, 1944, three weeks after D-day.
On 15 July 1944, De frie Danske reported on the execution of Fiil, his son and son-in-law, the life sentence imposed on his older daughter and the two-year sentence imposed on his younger daughter, and compared Fiil to historical national heroes, Svend Gønge and Niels Ebbesen, while lamenting the profound loss experienced by Fiil's widow. News of the executions contributed to an escalation of general strikes in Copenhagen.
Six months later, the January 1945 issue of the resistance newspaper Frit Danmark reported that on 29 June the previous year Fiil and seven other named members of the Hvidsten group had been executed.
for fallen resistance members including those of the Hvidsten group

Members of the group and their fates

The following are the eight members of Hvidsten Group that were executed:
The following members were sentenced to life in prison:
The following members were sentenced a prison sentence of four years:
The following members were sentenced a prison sentence of two years:
Other members:
Affiliates
The bodies of the eight executed members of Hvidsten Group were found in Ryvangen, and in the summer of 1945 their remains were taken home to Hvidsten and buried 100 meters north of Hvidsten Inn, where there is a memorial grove and erected a monument with the following inscription:
Rough translation of the full inscription on the Memorial stone reads:
Deed for Denmark brought this day.

Bravely acted, true until death.

Let light shine in the red of morning,

They gave their lives for Denmark's cause.
S. P. KRISTENSEN * 20. 8. 1887

ALBERT IVERSEN * 28. 9. 1896

NIELS N. KJÆR * 2. 4. 1903

JOH KJÆR HANSEN * 2. 4. 1907

HENNING ANDERSEN * 16. 7. 1917

MARIUS FIIL * 21. 6. 1893

PETER SØRENSEN * 8. 6. 1919

NIELS FIIL * 12. 6. 1920
1944 on the 29 June

They fell before German bullets

Precious is their memory to Denmark

Erected in the year 1945

Portrayal in the media