By the end of the 18th century, gravestone designs in New England depicted an urn next to one of these objects instead of a winged cherub or a death’s head. Massachusetts authorized John Hull to mint three different “shillings” all depicting these objects. These objects name a revolt in New Hampshire protesting the King’s Broad Arrow Policy’s extension to the region. An agreement named for one of these objects near where the first trades had occurred created the New York (*) Stock Exchange. A Revolutionary-era protest flag depicts one of these objects below the Lockean phrase “An Appeal to Heaven.” The Loyal Nine’s anti-Stamp Act campaign popularized the “Liberty” one of these objects as a meeting place in Boston. For 10 points, the back of Connecticut’s state quarter displays what object that hid the state’s Royal Charter? ■END■
ANSWER: trees [accept willows, pines, oaks, buttonwoods, or elms; accept pine tree shilling, oak tree shilling, or willow tree shilling; accept Pine Tree Flag; accept Buttonwood Agreement; accept Liberty Tree; accept Charter Oak]
<GP, American History>
= Average correct buzz position