I don't own or have access to every possible book, so used a source available to me at the time rather than have names with no reference to pin to them.
No problem. Most of the pre-David Rose 13er names came from Kelsey's books and common usage. I can scan them if you want to see them.
Here are in the following books (in order of publication date) that predate David Rose's book:
Utah Mountaineering Guide (1983)
Utah Mountaineering Guide 2nd edition (1986)
Utah Mountaineering Guide 3rd edition (1997)
Climbers and Hikers Guide to the World's Mountains and Volcanoes 4th edition (Henrys Fork area peaks) (2001).
While on the topic, here are UT 12ers with unofficial names lacking a reference in the database (Can you provide a source for these names)?:
Yes, I can help with thise since I am the one who compiled the original WMC (Wasatch Mountain Club) lists of 12ers and 13ers in Utah. As far as I know the list I compiled was the first lists to ever rank the rank the 12ers and 13ers by prominence (though referred to as saddle rise). I did it in the Salt Lake Library between 1990 and 1991. (Kelsey's lists in his books, dating to 1983, did have a list of 13ers and other peaks, but didn't follow a set criteria for differentiating separate peaks).
Here is some background and sources:
John Veranth wrote the then updated version of the book Hiking the Wasatch (WMC publication) in 1988 and included the list of 10,000+ foot peaks in the Wasatch. The criteria used was 200 feet though, rather than the 300 fee LOJ uses. I did the same thing for the Uinta Mountains, but it took me two years.
The original intention was for me to publish a guidebook, with the help of John to the Uinta Mountains, but in the end John was too busy and it ended up being too big a project for me to cover the entire range. I ended up publishing the book for just the western portion of the Uintas, while John at a later tume eventually updated the old version of Mel Davis' High Uinta Trails (now out of print). My book is below, but it's also out of print (though I still have a bunch in the basement if anyone wants a free copy):
https://www.amazon.com/Western-Uinta-Ba ... 1890828173Anyway, to make the long story short, I never did publish the guidebook covering all the 12ers and 13ers, but I did create the (as far as I know) original list.
As far as the Wasatch Mountain Club list I created is concerned, this was done in the Salt Lake County Downtown Library, long before topo maps were on the internet! It was quite the task.
Here are some of the sources used for the names for the ones I remember.
Peaks such as the Blacks Fork Peaks came from the Utah Division of Wildlife Resource publication for the Blacks Fork Drainage in the late 1970's. It referred to the peaks as the Blacks Fork Peaks and I was the one that simply stuck the labels on them such as Central, South, and NW.
The same is true of the Burnt Fork Peaks, perhaps referred to generically. I don't remember what UDOWR booklet Burnt Fork was grouped with.
The name Swasey Knob also came from the Utah Division of Wildlife Resource publication for the Yellowstone River Drainage
Of note, the 10er labeled Duke BM on LOJ was also listed as Flat Iron Mountain on the Utah Division of Wildlife Resource publication in the Provo River Publication. I know I do have a hard copy of this one. The Forest Service map at the trailhead (if it still exist) labels it as Duke Mountain.
South Red Castle was labeled as such because some maps and sources such as Kelsey's label it as Red Castle (I do have hard copies of this I can scan if you want to see). The USGS maps indicate that the 12,700 point is the "real" Red Castle, so the name South Red Castle was used to differentiate the two different peaks that are labeled as Red Castle on various maps.
Many of the names of (mostly 11ers) along Highway 150 came from the following 1955 publication, the Rocks and Scenery of Camp Steiner, Summit and Wasatch Counties:
https://www.amazon.com/Scenery-Counties ... mp+steinerCoffin Mountain is labeled in the Utah Mountaineering Guide, 2nd and 3rd editions.
Cleve Peak is also labeled in the Utah Mountaineering Guide, 2nd and 3rd editions. Same with West Clover.
If I remember right, Allsop Peaks were also referred to as such by Kelsey.
East Gilbert is labeled in the Utah Mountaineering Guide, 2nd and 3rd editions
North Cathedral is labeled in a photograph in the Utah Mountaineering Guide 2nd edition.
Val Benchmark is on the USGS map, but the benchmark isn't on the exact summit. I believe that it is also labeled as Val in the old High Uintas Trails, but I'd have to check on this.
Deadhorse Peak is the name the Forest Service uses (or did use) because it is near Dead Horse Pass (I worked at the Scout Camp at East Fork Bear River in 1990 and 1991).
For the original WMC list, some of the peaks were labeled by me since it was suggested to me that I just used the nearest name feature. This is the case with East Hayden (peak east of Hayden Peak), East Wilson, and North Beulah. I was also the one that tagged East Dead Horse Peak because it was east of Dead Horse Peak.
(This is what was done by others before me in the WMC for the Wasatch Peaks lists, such as when Perkins Peak was named for Perkins Hollow and Circle All Peak was named for the Circle All Slide Path).
Unfortunately, for the Timothy Peaks, I don't remember if it was the Division of Wildlife Resources Publication or one that I tagged on because of the Timothy Lakes. Unfortunately, I don't have a hard copy of the older Division of Wildlife Resources book for Swift Creek. I do have a copy of the 1990's one, but those have a different style of map than the ones from the 1970's and early 1980's. I do have hard copies of the old ones for several other drainages.
Penny Nickell Lake is in the the Division of Wildlife Resources publication. I tagged the name on the peak. The same is true for Bluebell Lake Peak and Fish Lake Peaks. It was me that pinned the names on them for the original list. The nearest named features were the lakes.
I know that I have seen the Delano-Brigham Ridge on a map somewhere (maybe the Fishlake National Forest Guidebook-I'm not sure), but the peak itself probably wasn't called out and that one wasn't on the original WMC list.