Historical overview Islam in the United States can be traced back to the 16th century when
African slaves were brought to North America from
West and
Central Africa, around 80% of whom were
Muslims. Most slaves tried to maintain Islamic religious practices after their arrival but were forcibly converted to Christianity. Some enslaved Muslims managed to preserve their religious practices. In the mid-17th century, Ottoman Muslims are documented to have immigrated with other European immigrants, such as
Anthony Janszoon van Salee, a merchant of mixed origin from Morocco. Immigration drastically increased from 1878 to 1924 when Muslims from the
Balkans, and Syria settled especially in the Midwestern United States. During that era, the
Ford Motor Company employed Muslims as well as African-Americans, since they were the most inclined to work in its factories under demanding conditions. By the 1930s and 1940s, Muslims in the US built mosques for their communal religious observance. As of the early 21st century, the number of Muslims in the United States is estimated at 3.5 to 4.5 million, and Islam is predicted to eventually become the second-largest religion in the US.
Early records One of the earliest accounts of Islam's possible presence in North America dates to 1528, when a Moroccan slave, called
Mustafa Azemmouri, was shipwrecked near what is now Galveston, Texas. He and three Spanish survivors subsequently traveled through much of the American southwest and the Mexican interior before reaching Mexico City. Historian Peter Manseau wrote: Muslims' presence [in the United States] is affirmed in documents dated more than a century before religious liberty became the law of the land, as in a Virginia statute of 1682 which referred to "negroes, moores, molatoes, and others, born of and in heathenish, idolatrous, pagan, and Mahometan parentage and country" who "heretofore and hereafter may be purchased, procured, or otherwise obtained, as slaves."
American Revolution and thereafter Records from the
American Revolutionary War indicate that at least a few likely Muslims fought on the American side. Among the recorded names of American soldiers are "Yusuf ben Ali" (a member of the
Turks of South Carolina community), "Bampett Muhamed" and possibly
Peter Salem. File:Letter of George Washington to Mohammed ben Abdallah in appreciation of the signature of the Treaty of Peace and Friendship signed in Marrakech in 1787.jpg|Letter of
George Washington to
Mohammed ben Abdallah in appreciation of the
Treaty of Peace and Friendship, signed in 1787. File: Portrait of Yarrow Mamout (Muhammad Yaro), 1819. Charles Willson Peale.jpg|
Yarrow Mamout (Muhammad Yaro), 1819.
Portrait by
Charles Willson Peale,
Philadelphia Museum of Art The first country to recognize the United States as an independent nation was the
Sultanate of Morocco, under its ruler
Mohammed ben Abdallah, in the year 1777. He maintained several correspondences with President
George Washington. On December 9, 1805, President
Thomas Jefferson hosted a dinner at the
White House for his guest Sidi Soliman Mellimelli, an envoy from
Tunis.
Bilali "Ben Ali" Muhammad was a Fula Muslim from
Timbo, Futa-Jallon, in present-day
Guinea-Conakry, who arrived at
Sapelo Island during 1803. While enslaved, he became the religious leader and Imam for a slave community numbering approximately eighty Muslim men residing on his plantation. During the
War of 1812, Muhammad and the eighty Muslim men under his leadership protected their master's Sapelo Island property from a British attack. He is known to have fasted during the month of Ramadan, worn a fez and
kaftan, and observed the
Muslim feasts, in addition to consistently performing the five obligatory prayers. In 1829, Bilali authored a thirteen-page Arabic
Risala on Islamic beliefs and the rules for ablution, morning prayer, and the calls to prayer. Known as the
Bilali Document, it is currently housed at the University of Georgia in Athens.
Nineteenth century Estimates ranging from a dozen to 292 Muslims served in the Union military during the American Civil War, including
Private Mohammed Kahn, who was born in
Persia, raised in
Afghanistan, and emigrated to the United States. The highest-ranking Muslim officer in the
Union Army was Captain Moses Osman. Another Muslim soldier from the Civil War was Max Hassan, an African who worked for the military as a porter. ). A Greek/Syrian convert to Islam, Phillip Tedro (a name he reverted to later in life), born in Smyrna, who renamed himself
Hajj Ali, 'Ali who made the pilgrimage to Mecca,' (commonly spelled as "Hi Jolly") was hired by the
United States Cavalry in 1856 to tend camels in Arizona and California. He would later become a prospector in Arizona. Hajj Ali died in 1903.
Alexander Russell Webb is considered by historians to be the earliest prominent Anglo-American convert to Islam in 1888. In 1893, he was the sole representative of Islam at the first Parliament of the World's Religions. The Russian-born Muslim scholar and writer
Achmed Abdullah (1881–1945) was another prominent early American Muslim. In the 1891 Supreme Court case
In re Ross, the Court referred to “the intense hostility of the people of Muslim faith to all other sects, and particularly to Christians". Scores of Muslim immigrants were turned away at U.S. ports in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Christian immigrants suspected of secretly being Muslims were also excluded.
Slaves , who was a Muslim prince from
West Africa and was captured by slave traders and transported to the United States. Many
enslaved people brought to America from Africa were Muslims from the predominantly-Muslim
West African region. Between 1701 and 1800, some 500,000 Africans arrived in what became the United States. According to 21st century researchers Donna Meigs-Jaques and R. Kevin Jaques, "[t]hese enslaved Muslims stood out from their compatriots because of their resistance, determination and education." It is estimated that over 50% of the slaves imported to North America came from areas where Islam was followed by at least a minority population. Thus, no less than 200,000 came from regions influenced by Islam. Substantial numbers originated from
Senegambia, a region with an established community of
Muslim inhabitants extending to the 11th century. Through a series of conflicts, primarily with the
Fulani jihad states, about half of the Senegambian
Mandinka were converted to Islam, while as many as a third were sold into slavery to the Americas through capture in conflict. Michael A. Gomez speculated that Muslim slaves may have accounted for "thousands, if not tens of thousands", but does not offer a precise estimate. He also suggests many non-Muslim slaves were acquainted with some tenets of Islam, due to Muslim trading and proselytizing activities. Historical records indicate many enslaved Muslims conversed in the Arabic language. Some even composed literature (such as autobiographies) and commentaries on the Quran. Some newly arrived Muslim slaves assembled for communal
salat (prayers). Some were provided a private praying area by their owner. The two best documented Muslim slaves were
Ayuba Suleiman Diallo and
Omar Ibn Said. Suleiman was brought to America in 1731 and returned to Africa in 1734. File:William Hoare of Bath - Portrait of Ayuba Suleiman Diallo, (1701-1773).jpg|Ayuba Suleiman Diallo was the son of an
Imam of Boonda in Africa, before being enslaved. File:Omar Ibn Said.jpg|Omar Ibn Said was an Islamic scholar from
Senegal. File:Surat al Mulk bu Omar bin Said (1770-1864).jpg|
Surat
Al-Mulk from the
Qur'an copied by Omar ibn Said.
Religious freedom Views of Islam in America affected debates regarding freedom of religion during the drafting of the state constitution of
Pennsylvania in 1776. Constitutionalists promoted religious toleration while Anti-constitutionalists called for reliance on Protestant values in the formation of the state's republican government. The former group won out and inserted a clause for religious liberty in the new state constitution. American views of Islam were influenced by favorable
Enlightenment writings from Europe, as well as Europeans who had long warned that Islam was a threat to Christianity and republicanism. In 1776,
John Adams published
Thoughts on Government, in which he mentions the Islamic prophet
Muhammad as a "sober inquirer after truth" alongside
Confucius,
Zoroaster,
Socrates, and other thinkers. In 1785,
George Washington stated a willingness to hire "Mahometans", as well as people of any nation or religion, to work on his private estate at Mount Vernon if they were "good workmen". In 1790, the South Carolina legislative body granted
special legal status to a community of Moroccans. ( see the
Moors Sundry Act) In 1797, President John Adams signed the
Treaty of Tripoli, declaring the United States had no "character of enmity against the laws, religion, or tranquillity, of
Mussulmen". , Article 11 In his
autobiography, published in 1791,
Benjamin Franklin stated that he "did not disapprove" of a meeting place in Pennsylvania that was designed to accommodate preachers of all religions. Franklin wrote that "even if the Mufti of Constantinople were to send a missionary to preach Mohammedanism to us, he would find a pulpit at his service". President
Thomas Jefferson defended religious freedom in America, including those of Muslims. Jefferson explicitly mentioned Muslims when writing about the movement for religious freedom in
Virginia. In his autobiography Jefferson wrote "[When] the [Virginia] bill for establishing religious freedom ... was finally passed, ... a singular proposition proved that its protection of opinion was meant to be universal. Where the preamble declares that coercion is a departure from the plan of the holy author of our religion, an amendment was proposed, by inserting the word 'Jesus Christ', so that it should read 'a departure from the plan of Jesus Christ, the holy author of our religion'. The insertion was rejected by a great majority, in proof that they meant to comprehend within the mantle of its protection the Jew and the Gentile, the Christian and
Mahometan, the Hindoo and infidel of every denomination." While President, Jefferson also participated in an
iftar with the Ambassador of
Tunisia in 1809. However, not all politicians were pleased with the religious neutrality of the Constitution, which prohibited any religious test. Anti-Federalists in the 1788 North Carolina ratifying convention opposed the new constitution; one reason was the fear that some day Catholics or Muslims might be elected president. William Lancaster said: :Let us remember that we form a government for millions not yet in existence ... In the course of four or five hundred years, I do not know how it will work. This is most certain, that Papists may occupy that chair, and Mahometans may take it. I see nothing against it. In 1788, Americans held inaccurate, and often contradicting, views of the
Muslim world, and used that in political arguments. For example, the anti-Federalists compared a strong central government to the Sultan of the Ottoman Empire and the American army to Turkish Janissaries, arguing against a strong central government. On the other hand,
Alexander Hamilton argued that despotism in the Middle East was the result of the Sultan not having enough power to protect his people from oppressive local governors; thus he argued for a stronger central government.
20th century Modern Muslims in New York (1912) and the
Ottoman Turks (1902–1913) Small-scale migration to the U.S. by Muslims began in 1840, with the arrival of
Yemenis and
Turks, In 2017 they celebrated the 110th anniversary of their establishment. • 1915: What is most likely the first American mosque was founded by
Albanian Muslims in
Biddeford, Maine. A Muslim cemetery still exists there. • 1920: The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community was established by the arrival of
Mufti Muhammad Sadiq, an Indian
Ahmadi Muslim missionary, he later purchased a building in south Chicago and converted it to what is today known as the
Al-Sadiq Mosque which was rebuilt as purpose-built mosque in 1990s. • 1921: The
Highland Park Mosque was built in
Highland Park, Michigan, although closed a few years later. • 1929: A mosque was built in
Ross, North Dakota, founded by Syrian Muslims; there is still a cemetery nearby. • 1934: The oldest continuously and still standing building built specifically to be a
mosque was established in
Cedar Rapids, Iowa. The mosque is where
Abdullah Igram a notable Muslim veteran would teach the Quran, Abdullah Igram later wrote a letter to President Eisenhower persuading him to add the M option (for Muslims) on military dog tags. • 1935: The statue of Mohammed was drawn on the north wall of the US Supreme Court building in 1935. Also, statues of Charlemagne and Justinian as one of eighteen great law givers of history are seen around the statue of Mohammed. • 1945: A mosque existed in
Dearborn, Michigan, home to the largest
Arab-American population in the U.S. "Since the 1950s," many notable
political activists and
socialites with influence over politicians have come from the American Muslim community. The Muslim population of the U.S. increased dramatically after President
Lyndon B. Johnson signed the
Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 into law. Approximately 2.78 million people immigrated to the United States from countries with significant Muslim populations between 1966 and 1997, with some estimating 1.1 million people of that population being Muslims. One-third of those immigrants originated from North Africa or the Middle East, one-third originated from
South Asian countries, with the remaining third originating from across the entire world. Immigration to the United States post-1965 favored those deemed to have specialized educational and skills, thus impacting the socio-economic makeup of American Muslims. The United States began seeing Muslim immigrants arrive in the late 20th century as refugees due to such reasons as political unrest, war, and famine. ==Subgroups of Muslim Americans==