Geoffrey Hare Clayton was an Anglican archbishop[1] in the 20th century.
[6] In 1934 he became bishop of Johannesburg[7] and served for 14 years before his appointment as archbishop of Cape Town.
A sub-prelate of the Order of St John of Jerusalem, he died on 7 March 1957.
[8] On Ash Wednesday 1957, the day before he died, Clayton signed, on behalf of the bishops of the Church of the Province of South Africa, a letter to the prime minister of South Africa, J. G. Strijdom refusing to obey and refusing to counsel the people of the Anglican Church in South Africa to obey, the provisions of section 29(c) of the Native Laws Amendment Act.
The act sought to enforce apartheid in all Christian congregations.