The Potter family were wealthy
Unitarians who were members of
Cross Street Chapel and the
Portico Library, and were concerned with the welfare of the poor. Thomas and Richard Potter became concerned with unfair representation of the people in
parliament in rapidly expanding industrialised towns in the
Victorian era, such as Birmingham, Leeds, Manchester and Salford, and decided to form a group to promote change. In 1815, the first
Little Circle was formed, around a core of members from the Cross Street Chapel who were influenced by the ideas of
Jeremy Bentham and
Joseph Priestley. The founding members included
John Edward Taylor (cotton merchant),
Joseph Brotherton (a non-conformist minister and pioneering
vegetarian), Thomas Preston, and Thomas and Richard Potter. Meetings were held in a room at the back of the Potters' Cannon Street counting-house, generally known as the "plotting-parlour", they decided the time was right to advance their liberalist agenda. In 1820, Brotherton, Shuttleworth and Thomas Potter founded the Manchester
Chamber of Commerce. In the following year, the group supported John Edward Taylor in founding the liberal newspaper the
Manchester Guardian, to which they all contributed. Published by law only once a week, Taylor continued to edit the newspaper until his death. ==Business career==