found: Columbia gaz.(Baker, Mount (10,778 ft/3,285 m), Whatcom co., N. Wash., in Cascade Range, in Mt. Baker Natl. Forest; snowcapped extracted volcano clearly seen from Vancouver (B.C.) to NW)
found: GNIS, Mar. 19, 2008(Mount Baker, summit, Whatcom Co., Wash.)
found: Peakbagger.com Web site, Mar. 19, 2008(Mount Baker, Washington, Whatcom Co.; 10,781 feet, 3286 meters; alternate name: Koma-Kulshan; highest summit: Grant Peak; subpeaks: Sherman Peak (10,160 ft/3097 m), Colfax Peak (9440 ft/2877 m), Colfax Peak East (9355 ft/2851 m), Lincoln Peak (9080 ft/2768 m), Colfax Peak West (8704 ft/2653 m), Seward Peak (8000 ft/2438 m); 48°47ʹN 121°49ʹW; Cascade Range, North Cascades (Highest Point), Skagit Range (Highest Point), Baker-Shuksan Massif (Highest Point))
found: Washington place names, via WWW, Mar. 19, 2008(Mount Baker. A 10,778-foot peak east of Bellingham at the headwaters of the Nooksack and Baker rivers in central Whatcom County; Nooksack Indians called it Kollia-Kulshan, meaning "white, shining, steep mountain"; Clallam Indians used the name P-kowitz, meaning "white mountain"; in 1790, Manuel Quimper charted it as Gran Montana Carmelita. Other names were Ko-ma-el, used by Skagit Indians, White Friar, Great White Watcher, and the suggested names of Presidents James K. Polk and John Tyler)
found: GeoNames [algorithmically matched]summit; 48°46ʹ38ʺN 121°48ʹ48ʺW
found: Miles, J.C. Koma Kulshan : the story of Mount Baker, ©2010.
found: Nooksack Indian Tribe website, Nov. 27, 2018:Departments > Cultural Resources > Nooksack place names (Kweq' Smánit - Mt. Baker. [white mountain])