Places named for him include
Clayton, Georgia,
Clayton County, Georgia, and Clayton, Alabama. His final residence in Athens was located on the north side of Clayton Street, which the city named for him, approximately halfway between Thomas and Jackson Streets. (Lawrenceville, Georgia, named for a War of 1812 hero, also has a street named for Clayton, the only one of its original streets that does not commemorate a veteran of that war.) Clayton was a friend and congressional colleague of
Davy Crockett. Literary scholar
John Donald Wade posited that Clayton was the
ghost writer (or at least co-writer) of Crockett's autobiography, and possibly some of his other published works, but this suggestion has been robustly challenged. He was reported to be the author of the political pamphlet "Crockett's Life of Van Buren". ==References==