Allan Frederick Tinsdale White (5 September 1915 – 16 March 1993) was an English amateur first-class cricketer.
He was a right-handed batsman who played for both Warwickshire and Worcestershire, captaining the latter county between 1947 and 1949, though sharing the captaincy with Bob Wyatt in the last of those three seasons.
Born in Earlsdon, Coventry, White was educated at Uppingham School before going up to Pembroke College, Cambridge.
This proved to be a good choice – his obituary in Wisden called him "a popular and enterprising leader"[4] – and he again passed a thousand runs for the season, albeit from 54 innings, the most he was ever to play in a single summer.
From 1948 onwards his attentions were increasingly taken up by his off-field responsibilities as a mushroom farmer[4] and after a final season for Worcestershire in 1949 (a successful year in which they came third in the County Championship), he retired from first-class cricket.