Antarctica plays an important role in research on global change, and its unique geography, ocean, climate, and environment provide an ideal place for humankind to understand Earth's evolution. Remote sensing provides an effective means to monitor and observe large-scale processes on the continent. Synthetic aperture radar (SAR) in particular provides the capability for all-weather Earth observation. The Sentinel-1A and Sentinel-1B SAR satellites have ideal ground coverage and imaging frequency for observing Antarctica. This study developed a dataset of 69,586 Sentinel-1 EW mode satellite images of the Antarctic ice sheet from October 2014 to December 2020. The dataset was processed with the European Space Agency Sentinel Application Platform (SNAP) and a Python batch scheduling tool on the Big Earth Data Cloud Service Platform of the Chinese Academy of Sciences Big Earth Data Science Engineering Program (CASEarth). Several data processing operations were implemented to process the raw dataset, including radiometric calibration, invalid edge removal, geocoding, data reprojection to an Antarctic projection, data compression to TIFF format, and construction of image pyramids. The dataset is available at http://www.doi.org/10.11922/sciencedb.j00076.00085.