[1] Today the inn consists of five buildings of which the oldest is the travellers stable from 1790.
The following year the Gestapo arrested most of the group's members, including the inn keeper and his assistant son who were executed on 29 June 1944 leaving behind the widow Gudrun Fiil[3][4] who took over the inn.
In 1945 a memorial stone over the executed members of the Hvidsten group was raised near the inn.
[2]In 1984 the Danish postal service introduced a stamp depicting Hvidsten Inn in the hand of Arne Kühlmann.
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