The mosque was built in 1842 by
Prince Ghulam Mohammed, the youngest son of
Tipu Sultan. An identical mosque, the
Tipu Sultan Masjid Tollygunge, was built earlier in 1835, also by Ghulam Mohammed. Ghulam Mohammed used his own money to purchase a land in the central area of Calcutta and built this mosque. The Ghulam Mohammed Wakf Estate manages both of the mosques. In early 1980's the Tipu Sultan Masjid was damaged due to the construction works of
Kolkata Metro Railway in the Esplanade area. The move was regarded as a highly communal stand of the
West Bengal State Government. The Tipu Sultan Shahi Masjid Protection and Welfare Committee was founded in the late 1980s by Seraj Mubarki, Mohammad Sharfuddin, to inform people about the damage caused to the mosque by the
Kolkata Metro company. The committee negotiated with the Kolkata Metro authorities to repair the damage caused by the construction underneath the building. The authorities agreed to demolish the damaged part of the mosque and rebuild it. The committee continue to play an active role in the daily affairs of the mosque. Committee members raised 21,501 for the
2004 Tsunami victims as part of the Prime Minister's Tsunami fund. The committee went on a five-day hunger strike to seek the intervention of the central government when a Muslim
dargah was ruined in
Vadodara. The fast was later broken with an initiative by H.E. Honorable Governor Shri.
Gopal Krishna Gandhi who offered glass of juice to the fasters and later condemned attacks on
Hindu temples in Pakistan and the attacks on Christian missionaries in
Orissa and other parts of India. == Leadership ==