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Dick Whitman
earned a spot in
Oregon’s sports
legacy by reaching
the Major Leagues
for all or parts of
six seasons, and
helped two teams win
the National League
pennant. Born in
Woodburn in 1920,
Whitman played
outfield from
1940-42 at the
University of
Oregon, and signed
with the Brooklyn
Dodgers after the
1942 college season.
He hit a combined
.313 for two minor
league teams that
summer, then entered
military service
where he saw action
at the Battle of the
Bulge.
Whitman, at age
26, went immediately
to the Dodgers
following the war
and hit .260. The
team sent him to its
Triple-A team in
Montreal in 1947,
where he hit .327
with 62 RBIs and
helped the Royals to
the International
League championship.
In ’48, the Dodgers
brought him back in
mid-season and he
remained in the
Majors until 1951.
In Brooklyn, Whitman
was a reserve
outfielder and pinch
hitter. He played
for the 1949
National League
champion team. The
Dodgers traded him
to Philadelphia that
winter and he helped
the Phillies “Whiz
Kids” win the NL
title in 1950.
In his six
seasons in the big
leagues, he had 165
hits, drove in 67
runs, hit two homers
and finished with a
.259 average.
After moving back
to the minors, he
played for four
different teams,
including the
Portland Beavers in
1955. He hit .304
that season.
In 1956 and ’57,
he served as
player/manager of
the San Jose,
Calif., JoSox of the
Class C California
League. He retired
after the 1957
season at age 36.
In 10 seasons of
minor league action,
Whitman had 1,207
hits, hit 64 homers
and averaged a
combined .321 in
1,093 games.
Upon retiring,
Whitman moved into
the position of
maintenance manager
for the San Jose,
Calif., Water
Company and remained
in that post for 29
years. He died in
2003 at age 82.
Whitman was
inducted to the
Oregon Sports Hall
of Fame in 1982.
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