Hello,
I may be a bit late here but, just in case it's of interest, I have an ever-growing collection of local history items relating to Bournemouth and the surrounding area. When I get the time I scan them and share them on the Flickr site. I have a small album devoted to JOB POTTLE with the following biographical notes:
"Job Pottle was born on 22nd November, 1856, at Wimborne Minster, the son of Henry and Fanny. He had at least five brothers and three sisters. He was baptised at St James' Church, Poole on 22nd April, 1857. He bacem a bootmaker initially but later moved into photography. On 5th December, 1887, he married Mary Alice Wyatt, at Wimborne Minster, and they had a son, Reginald Charles, and a daughter, Ella Gertrude. When his father died, on 15th February, 1889, Job became the head of the household and remained in his childhood home: 34 East Street, Eastbrook, Wimborne Minster. He recorded the floods of 1894 and suffered a spinal injury helping to catch two women who leapt from a blazing building in East Street (but still photographed the charred remains of the shop the next day). He documented Wimborne's celebration of Queen Victoria's diamond jubilee in 1897. He famously photographed the visit of King Edward VII to Crichel in 1909 and memorably spotted a document case belonging to the King left behind on the Royal train. He returned the case to the King and received a treasured letter of thanks in response. He also re-photographed older pictures to sell as postcards and magic lantern slides, and these have become an important archive of Wimborne Minster. In 1921 Job and Mary spent six months in Canada before returning to live in Southampton. Mary died on 14th December, 1936, in Southampton but Job lived to be 90 (died, Southampton, 20th February, 1947)."
https://www.flickr.com/photos/alwyn_ladell/albums/72157712138485288Alwyn