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The ''Lagoda'' was an American [[whaling]] vessel from which fifteen crewmembers abandoned ship off the [[Tsugaru Strait]] in [[1848]], and were ultimately confined in [[Nagasaki]].
The fifteen crewmembers who fled from the ship and passed themselves off as castaways included seven (presumably white) Americans, and eight Native Hawaiians. As was standard practice for dealing with castaways from Western nations, they were rounded up by [[Matsumae han]] authorities and sent to Nagasaki to be repatriated via [[Dutch East India Company]] ships to Batavia. Because of their unruly behavior, the samurai authorities had the deserters forcibly confined in Matsumae, and then also in Nagasaki, to a stricter extent than how other castaways might have been treated. The sailors repeatedly tried to escape their confinement, and in despair at his imprisonment, one of the Hawaiians killed himself.
While in Nagasaki, they were for a time confined alongside [[Ranald MacDonald]].<ref>Matt Matsuda, ''Pacific Worlds'', University of Cambridge Press (2012), 233-237.</ref>
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==References==
*Mitani Hiroshi, David Noble (trans.), ''Escape from Impasse'', International House of Japan (2006), 93.
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[[Category:Ships]]
[[Category:Bakumatsu]]