Slide Rule Era, you really started me on a roll.
I dug up a Concrete Engineer's Handbook that my father had that was dated 1918, and it referred only to inch-lbs.
ACI's 1955 Reinforced Concrete Design Handbook uses ft-kips only.
My old Strength of Materials book dated 1951 uses ft-lbs only.
My textbook on Statically Indeterminate Structures dated 1951 refers to ft-kips throughout.
My textbook on Timber Engineering dated 1949 uses inch-lbs.
My PCI Design Handbook dated 1992 uses ft-kips throughout.
I have a Standard Handbook for Civil Engineers dated 1996 in which the chapter on concrete design refers to in-kips, the chapter on wood design shows in-lbs and the chapter on steel design uses kip-inches.
My 2001 design manual for Engineered Wood Construction uses in-lbs.
Hence, my conclusion from this interesting exercise and the input that all of you have made is that the term kip-ft seems to have appeared much earlier in steel handbooks and texts, and that how one refers to bending moment seems to be related to which discipline you are working in. Wood and concrete still seem to use the Distance-Load units while steel seems to have changed to a Load-Distance terminology.
Since I've mostly worked with concrete, I guess that's why I am hung up on the ft-kip reference. So, it looks like everyone is correct --- its just your own preference that counts.
Thanks to you all for your participation in this thread.