Henrik Christian Fredrik Størmer (19 August 1839 – 29 December 1900) was a Norwegian engineer, inventor, industrialist and entrepreneur.
In 1893–94, a commission that included Størmer was put together by the Norwegian Engineer and Architect Association; it proposed a law for the Parliament that would enforce abandonment of necessary property to construct power lines.
[2] The narrow gauge railway proponents Cato Guldberg and Carl Abraham Pihl filed a defamation against him, which they won.
[1] Even though Størmer himself wrote Bokmål, he sided with Ivar Aasen and Noregs Mållag in the Norwegian language conflict.
[1] In his testament, Størmer attested his remaining waterfalls and patents to the Nynorsk book publishing house Det Norske Samlaget.