Johan Richard Krogness (11 March 1814 – 3 February 1872) was a Norwegian businessperson and politician.
He was born in Trondhjem as a son of merchant Erik Rolfsen Krogness and Ingeborg Jensdatter.[1] His half-sister Ingeborg Krogness was the mother of Erik Vullum.[2]
Krogness took the examen artium in 1835 and went on to study law, but quit higher education before graduating. He returned to Trondhjem as a merchant from 1841 before settling at the manor Karlslyst in Hommelvigen,[3] where he was a ship-owner and ran a brickworks.[4]
Krogness served as mayor of Strinden. He was a deputy representative to the Parliament of Norway in 1851 and was elected in 1853, and was re-elected in 1856, 1859, 1862, 1865, 1868 and 1870, representing the rural constituency of Søndre Trondhjems Amt.[1]
Krogness befriended Henrik Wergeland while he was a student, later Bjørnstjerne Bjørnson and was a close follower of Johan Sverdrup in parliamentary politics. As such, Krogness was one of the forerunners of the Liberal Party.[3] He missed the 1871 session due to illness, and died in February the year after[1] from "weakness of the chest".[4] He was married to Danish woman Elisabeth Lucie Marie Biering.[3]