Deacon White was a pro baseball player who played Catcher / Third baseman. White was born on December 2, 1847, in Caton, New York. White died on July 7, 1939, in St. Charles Township, Kane County, Illinois. This page will take a closer look at Deacon White’s net worth.
White batted Left and threw Right. White debuted in the MLB on May 4, 1871 for the Cleveland Forest Citys. In all, White played for the Cleveland Forest Citys, Cleveland Forest Citys, Boston years, Chicago White Stockings, Boston years, Cincinnati Reds, Cincinnati Stars, Buffalo Bisons, Detroit Wolverines, Pittsburgh Pirates, Buffalo Bisons, Cleveland Forest Citys, and Cincinnati Reds. White’s career ended with the Buffalo Bisons (PL) in 1890.
Some of White’s most prominent statistics in the MLB included a Batting average stat of .312, a Hit s stat of 2066 (1619 in the NL/PL), and a Run batted in stat of 988 (756 in the NL/PL). Some of the highlights of Deacon White’s career included: List of Major League Baseball batting champions, and 2× List of Major League Baseball annual runs batted in leaders.
Deacon White was inducted into the National Hall of Fame by the Pre-Integration Era CommitteeNational Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum: “Hank O’Day, Jacob Ruppert, Deacon White Elected to national Baseball Hall of Fame by Pre-Integration Committee”, December 3, 2012 Retrieved June 23, 2013 during the Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, 2013 induction period with a vote of 87.5%.
Player salaries can range widely. In Major League Baseball, the median pay is around $3 million every year. Top MLB players can make $25 million or more every year, and lower rated players earn $1 million or less. Outside the MLB, most contracts pay less than $10,000 a year.
So what was baseball player Deacon White’s net worth at the time of death? Our estimate for Deacon White’s net worth at death is:
Want to see some related net worth articles? Check out these: Don Kirkwood, Paul Carpenter, Walker Cress, Rickey Clark, Walt Thomas, Sam Howard, Herm Starrette, Dave Giusti, Johnny Lavin, Oscar Horstmann, and Mark Lee.