Absolutly not. he did no want slaves the stupidest question ever.
war elephants
Abraham Lincoln abolished slavery in the Southern states. The Emancipation proclamation announced that the slaves were officially and legally free. Although the Emancipation Proclamation declared Slaves of the Confederacy "Freed", it had no authority and did not free any slaves unless they made it to the North from the Confederacy. Lincoln's Abolitionist philosophy was alive and well in both the Union and the Confederacy at the time he wrote the Emancipation Proclamation. Through that edict Lincoln was able to offer a "kick start" to the movement and encourage the formation of "Underground Railroads" by Southern Abolitionist to assist escaping slaves.
The King of Siam offered Abraham Lincoln a herd of elephants which Lincoln declined.https://www.civilwar.org/learn/primary-sources/lincoln-rejects-king-siams-offer-elephants
Slavery was important to the north since it was a form of trade. The slaves were also used to offer free labor to farms and plantations.
During the Civil War, Abraham Lincoln received the offer of a very unique gift from the King of Siam, Rama IV. He offered to send Lincoln war elephants to use against the Confederacy. The president thanked him for his generous offer, but declined the elephants.
It proclaimed in a grandiose fashion that Southern slaves would be 'thenceforward and forever free' - just when Lincoln's government carried no authority in the Southern states. However, it was the beginning of total war, as it gave Union troops the right to rob the enemy of his property - which included slaves. Those slaves followed the armies back to their camps, and were given jobs there. The obvious conclusion was that if the North won the war, those slaves could never be returned to their one-time owners.
The American Colonization Society was formed to send Freedmen and women to new homes in Africa. Members were anti-slavery people, but many, as with Abraham Lincoln, were not ardent abolitionists. The Society's major obstacle was money. Members sought to buy slaves' freedom and then offer them a home in Africa.
During 1863, President Lincoln attended a play called the Marble Heart. John Wilkes Booth starred in this play. Lincoln was so impressed by Wilke's performance that he invited him for dinner at the White House. Wilkes declined the offer. This part of Lincoln's life is so ironic.
What helped temper rebellion and offer comfort to colonial slaves?
Moriah
It depends on what you mean. If you mean important events in Abraham Lincoln's life, then here is a timeline of events: ~1849: While serving in the U.S. House, Lincoln is offered the post of territorial governor of Oregon by President Zachary Taylor. Lincoln declines the offer. ~1860: Lincoln's election as president ensures slavery would not exist in the far West. ~1861: Soon after taking office, Lincoln condemns the Crittenden Compromise, a Kentucky proposal to assuage secessionist Southerners by allowing some expansion of slavery in the West. Congress then rejects the compromise, making Civil War certain. ~1862: Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation frees slaves in territories not already under Union control. ~1862: Lincoln signs the Pacific Railway Act, the nation's most expensive public works project at the time. The law leads to the Transcontinental Railroad's completion in Utah in 1869. ~1862: Lincoln signs the Homestead Act, which gave all applicants 160 acres of undeveloped land outside of the original 13 colonies. The act would eventually lead to the granting of 1.6 million homesteads. If instead you mean different memorials or monuments or milestones that honor Lincoln, there are two many to name. But if you get the book Don't Know Much About Abraham Lincoln, there will be a long list in the back.
In mid-August of 1862 US President Lincoln meets with a group of leading former slaves and free Afro-Americans in Washington DC. Lincoln urges this group to consider his plan for sending freed salves and Northern Blacks to a colony. Colonization of former slaves to Africa is still part of Lincoln's plans to help solve the slavery problem. He believes that Blacks will be better off ruling themselves in a colony. He does not mention his emancipation plans.