The definition of a Super Outbreak is different for everyone, but for me, a Super Outbreak has to have many supercells interacting with a very potent environment, resulting in many violent and destructive tornadoes in a short period of time, not something like a May Sequence (regardless of path length but mainly based on pure impact alone). These outbreaks below come to mind when classifying Super Outbreaks:
February 19-20, 1884 (Several violent tornadoes with supercells with unusually large hail cores for Dixie)
March 28, 1920 (Violent Tornadoes touching down everywhere)
April 20, 1920 (Unusual morning tornado event affected the same area as 4/27, see clipping below for a damage description from an EF4 Tornado that affected Neshoba (Hit by Philadelphia Tornado on 4/27/2011)and Winston Counties (Hit by Louisville on 4/28/14) on that day)
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March 21, 1932 (Numerous violent tornadoes did massive damage across Alabama and Tennessee. Bottom clipping shows violent tornado damage at Paint Rock, AL. You might be able to see the tornado track in the background going up the mountain. Tornadoes on this day affected locations struck on 4/27 (Bridgeport, Cullman - Arab, Tuscaloosa))
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March 21, 1952 (Several rather short-tracked but violent tornadoes devastated several Ozark Towns. Especially hard hit were Dierks (pictured below), Cotton Plant, Judsonia, and Henderson, TN)
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April 11, 1965 (Every single supercell that went up in the warm sector dropped a violent and deadly tornado. Many towns were hard hit, including Toledo (seen below))
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April 3, 1974 (No introduction needed. Pictured below is Sayler Park, OH)
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May 31, 1985 (Many violent tornadoes touched down across Pennsylvania. Several of these tornadoes were well over a mile wide. The aerial scars from many of the tornadoes that day is seen below)
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May 23, 2008 (Several violent tornadoes rampaged across Kansas and Oklahoma, only one of which actually hit anything significant (pictured below))
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April 27, 2011 (One again, no introduction needed. Numerous extremely high-end, violent, and long-tracked tornadoes devastated several Dixie Alley Towns. Pictured below is Hackleburg)
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April 14, 2012 (Numerous intense tornadoes tracked across Kansas, but just happened to stay in mostly rural areas. Pictured below is a radar shot of an "EF1" which passed near Manchester, OK on that day)
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