The biggest reason is that Abraham Lincoln was against slavery, and the confederate states were for it.
To keep him from abolishing slavery in the south.
"You want to forgive" actually has two verbs, want and forgive.
During the First Battle of Bull Run (Manassas) in July 1861, President Abraham Lincoln wanted General George B. McClellan to take decisive action against Confederate forces. Lincoln hoped McClellan would lead a strong offensive to achieve a quick victory, thereby boosting Union morale and demonstrating military effectiveness. However, McClellan hesitated and delayed, leading to a Confederate victory, which frustrated Lincoln and contributed to ongoing tensions between the two leaders.
Because Richmond was the capitol of the Confederate States of America, where the Confederate leaders were all located. Only miles form Washington DC, capturing the confederate leadership would disrupt all elements of the confederates operations.
Lincoln wanted the states to be united and to show the other nations that America could fix itself without any other help.
Robert E. Lee. He said he would have to wait to see if Virginia voted Confederate. When it did, he went with his state.
Don't Want to Forgive Me Now was created on 1995-06-05.
It depends on what they did. If you feel you want to then maybe they should. If you forgive them and want to give them another chance then you should.
The fort in Charleston Harbor that President Lincoln did not want to surrender was Fort Sumter. It was a strategic stronghold that represented federal authority in the South. Lincoln aimed to resupply the fort rather than abandon it, which ultimately led to the Confederate attack on April 12, 1861, marking the beginning of the Civil War.
To monopolise this important military highway and deny its use to the enemy. Also to isolate all Confederate units to the West of the river.
In case Lincoln lost. That would mean the North was not wanting to fight on. In that case, there would have been a compromise peace, and the South would probably have gained their independence. As it was, Lincoln won, and the Confederate cause was totally doomed from then on. Any further fighting was pointless, except to show that the Confederates were not the sort of people who would give up easily. (Not much consolation to the bereaved families of those who had died for nothing.)