Isaac Stoutenburgh (March 12, 1739 – October 12, 1799) was an American politician from New York.
[1] He fought in the American Revolutionary War, and became a colonel of the State Militia.
Stoutenburgh was a member of the 2nd, 3rd and 4th New York Provincial Congresses from 1775 to 1777.
[2] In February 1780, he was appointed as a Commissioner of Forfeitures for the Southern District, in charge of the confiscation and sale of Loyalists' properties.
[3] On March 26, 1796, he was appointed as one of the Commissioners to build the first state prison in New York, the Newgate Prison in New York City, which was inaugurated in 1797.