author
Remembered mainly through a small surviving body of Dutch fiction, this little-known writer is associated with gentle moral storytelling and a classic tale linked to nineteenth-century popular literature.

by F. Lohr, Gustav Nieritz
Very little reliable biographical information about this author could be confirmed from the sources I found. Project Gutenberg lists F. Lohr as the author of Een vriendelijke morgenstond and as a co-credited author on De ganzenkoopman van Neurenberg.
The surviving record suggests a writer connected with short Dutch-language fiction aimed at a broad readership, with stories centered on everyday people, kindness, and misfortune. In the Project Gutenberg text, Een vriendelijke morgenstond is presented as "naar F. Lohr", which can imply the work was adapted or retold from Lohr rather than preserving a full modern author profile.
Because clear biographical sources were not available, it is safest to treat F. Lohr as an obscure historical author whose work survives more clearly than personal details. That air of mystery is part of the appeal: the books offer a glimpse of older European storytelling even when the author remains largely in the background.