Interesting historical question. In Section 8.7, Chapter 8 of Algorithms (2019)1, Erickson notes that
The simplest implementation of Ford’s generic shortest-path algorithm was
first sketched by Alfonso Shimbel in 1954, described in more detail by Edward
Moore in 1957, and independently rediscovered by Max Woodbury and George
Dantzig in 1957, by Richard Bellman in 1958, and by George Minty in 1958.
(Neither Woodbury and Dantzig nor Minty published their algorithms.) In full
compliance with Stigler’s Law, the algorithm is almost universally known as
Bellman-Ford, because Bellman explicitly used Ford’s 1956 formulation of relaxing edges, although some authors refer to "Bellman-Kalaba" and a few early sources refer to "Bellman-Shimbel".
In particular, the name Bellman-Kalaba is occasionally used for the following reason:
This name is most likely a reference to Richard Bellman and Robert Kalaba’s monograph on dynamic programming and control theory2, which describes Bellman’s algorithm. Bellman and Kalaba also published an extension of Bellman’s algorithm in that computes $k$th shortest paths, for any constant $k$.3
References
[1] Erickson, J. (2019). Algorithms. University of Illinois Press.
[2] Bellman, R., Kalaba, R. E. (1965). Dynamic programming and modern control theory (Vol. 81). New York: Academic Press.
[3] Bellman, R., Kalaba, R. (1960). On $k$th best policies. Journal of the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics. 8(4):582-588.