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Fort Leonard Wood will set its Thanksgiving table for 12,000 this year

Soldiers stationed at Fort Leonard Wood enjoy Thanksgiving dinner in this 2018 photo. This year, the installation will serve more than 12,000 meals.
Dawn Arden
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Fort Leonard Wood
Soldiers enjoy Thanksgiving dinner in November 2018 at Fort Leonard Wood near St. Robert. This year, the installation will serve more than 12,000 meals for the holiday.

A common question for people hosting a Thanksgiving dinner is how many guests they will have.

At Fort Leonard Wood, the answer is 12,000.

While the military installation in Missouri’s Ozarks 140 miles southwest of St. Louis serves three meals every day, the Thanksgiving dinner is its biggest and most meaningful of the year.

For the most part, operations at the military post carry on as normal the week of Thanksgiving, with thousands of recruits in basic or advanced individual training continuing their early days in the military under the instruction of drill sergeants and other Army staff.

“For a lot of the trainees, this may be the first time in their lives they have been away from family for Thanksgiving,” said Beverly Leggett, installation food program manager at Fort Leonard Wood. “We take that very seriously and want to give them something special.”

Most meals at Fort Leonard Wood consist of a couple of choices of entrees, starches and vegetables. Desserts and candies are not part of the usual menu.

But on Thanksgiving, Fort Leonard Wood provides three times the normal options. That will amount to a projected 7,000 pounds of turkey, 1,500 pounds of shrimp, 1,500 pounds of prime rib and 2,000 assorted cakes and pies.

“We were given the ability to create our own menu versus doing what the requirement is from big Army,” Leggett said. “We tried to make sure the traditional foods from across the country are here.”

That means side dishes will include baked macaroni and cheese, sweet potatoes, green bean casserole and collard greens.

“We did everything we could to make sure everyone would see something they recognize from their home Thanksgiving, regardless if they are from the West Coast, the East Coast or the South,” she said.

Also new this year is a vegetarian entree option: an acorn squash casserole.

Most of the diners will be soldiers stationed on post, but they will also include veterans, retirees and Gold Star Families — family members of those who died while serving.

Leggett said everyone at the table is important, but her mind is especially with those young recruits.

“I want them to remember how Thanksgiving was while they were stationed at Fort Leonard Wood. I want them to remember that we love them. We care about them, and we are here to support them and provide the very best for them,” she said.

Jonathan Ahl is the Newscast Editor and Rolla correspondent at St. Louis Public Radio.